Coordination Compounds and Nuclear Reactions Flashcards

Last lecture

1
Q

What is a coordination compound?

A
  • A combination of two or more atoms, ions, or molecules where a bond is formed by sharing a pair of electrons originally associated with only one of the compounds
    • It’s a coordinate covalent bond
    • The electron pair that is donated doesn’t have to be a lone pair. It could also be a pi bond from a double bond
    • The charge is the sum of the charges
    • Ex: a metal with ligands around it
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2
Q

What gives coordination compounds different colors?

A
  • Crystal field theory predicts the color of a coordination complex
    • D orbital splitting in transition metals.
      • When ligands attach to a transition metal to form a coordination complex, electrons in the d orbital split into high energy and low energy orbitals.
      • The amount that they split (Δo) depends on what’s the metal in the center, and the ligand
      • A photon equal to the energy difference ∆o can be absorbed. Larger energy differences changes the color.
        • If one ligand has a bigger splitting than another ligand, it will absorb the higher energy photon with the smaller wavelength, and transmit longer wavelength
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3
Q

What are common structures for coordination compounds?

A
  • Most common is octahedral
  • Very few tetrahedral complexes
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4
Q

What are isomers and their different types?

A
  • Structures are isomers if they have the same chemical formula
  • If they don’t have the same order of atom attachment, they’re constitutional isomers
  • If they can be made identical by rotation around a single bond, they’re conformational isomers
  • If they are mirror images, they’re enantiomers
  • If they aren’t mirror images, they’re diastereoisomers
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5
Q

What is binding energy and mass defect?

A
  • Binding energy keeps the nucleus bound together - HUGE energy
  • Mass and energy can be converted into one another, and there is a missing mass in the nucleus that is the mass of the binding energy
    • E=mc2
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6
Q

When will a nuclei decay?

A
  • If it has more than 83 protons
  • Usually breaks into a slightly more stable form, and a small alpha or beta particle
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7
Q

What are alpha particles?

A
  • an alpha particle is a helium nucleus
    • mass 4, atomic number 2
    • 2+ charge is understood, not written
    • can be stopped by paper
  • In a emission, the mass number decreases by 4 and the atomic number decreases by 2
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8
Q

What is beta decay?

A
  • Emit beta particles
    • can be electron or positron (specifically positron emission)
  • When there is a gain or loss of 1 atomic number and no change in mass number, that’s beta decay
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9
Q

What is gamma decay?

A
  • Emits gamma particles
    • Gamma particles are really high energy photons
  • Product has lower energy
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10
Q

Kinetics for decay?

A
  • Follow first order kinetics - rate is dependent on concentration of reactant
    • Exponential decay
  • After each successive half-life, one half of the original amount remains
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11
Q

How do you write a nuclear reaction equation?

A
  • Mass number and atomic number has to add up to same on both sides of arrow
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