Organometallic Chemistry Flashcards
What is Organometallic Chemistry?
An organometallic complex is one which contains, by definition, at least one metal-carbon bond (ionic or covalent, localised or delocalised) between one or more carbon atoms of an organic groups or molecule and a main group, transition, lanthanide, or actinide metal atom (or atoms)
How does the formation of bond between ligands and transition metals in an octahedral complex, affect the energy of the d-orbitals within the metal
- We get this octahedron splitting pattern with a t₂g set and a eg set split by the energy of Δo
- dxy, dxz and dyz are in t₂g (orbitals away from ligands = lower repulsion = lower energy)
- dz² and dx²-y² are in eg (orbtials towards ligands = more repulsion = higher energy)
How does the formation of bond between ligands and transition metals in a square planar complex, affect the energy of the d-orbtials within the metal
- Going from an ocethedral to a square planar complex it is essentially like the z-plane has been removed, hence the dxz and dyz orbitals are lowest in energy
- Ligands in the x-y plane go up in energy, so the dx²-y² and dxy go up in energy
What is the most likely transition see in a square planar complex?
d-d transition
From the dxy orbtial to the dx²-y² orbtial
How does the formation of a bond between ligands and transition metals in a tetrahedral complex, affect the energy of the d-orbitals within the metal
- We get this tetrahedral splitting pattern with a t₂ set and a e set split by the energy of Δt
- (no g because no centre of inversion)
- dz² and dx²-y² are in the lower energy e set
- dxy, dxz and dyz are in the higher energy t₂ set
What is Δt for a transition metal complex
= 4/9 Δo
What factors affect Δ?
- Metal oxidation state - higher O.S. bigger Δ.
- On moving from 3d→4d→5d = increase in Δ
- Number and geometry of ligands (tetrahedral always high spin due to large Δt)
- Nature of ligands - strong vs weak field ligands
What is the difference between a and b as symmetry lables
a singly degenerate, symmetric w.r.t. rotation about principal axis
b singly degenerate, antisymmetric w.r.t. rotation about principal axis
What do the symmetry lables e and t stand for
e doubly degenerate
t triply degenerate
What do the symmetry lables g and u stand for?
g centre of symmetry, even with respect to inversion (gerade)
u no centre of symmetry, odd with respect to nversion (ungerade)
The 4s orbitals on the metal form which bonding + antibonding molecular orbitals with ligands?
1 a1g bonding MO
2 a1g’ antibonding MO
The 4p orbitals on the metal form which bonding + antibonding molecular orbitals with ligands?
1 t1u bonding MO
2 t1u’ antibonding MO
The 3d orbtials on the metal form which bonding + antibonding molecular orbitals with ligands?
1 eg bonding MO
2 eg’ antibonding MO
Some of the 3d orbitals on the metal form which non-bonding molecular orbitals?
2 t2g
Most stable octahedral complexes have 18e- and up to which molecular orbital is filled?
Filling up to the t2g level (dxz, dyz, dxy)
A large HOMO-LUMO gap results and no antibonding orbitals are filled