Schweitzer Fachinformationen
Wenn es um professionelles Wissen geht, ist Schweitzer Fachinformationen wegweisend. Kunden aus Recht und Beratung sowie Unternehmen, öffentliche Verwaltungen und Bibliotheken erhalten komplette Lösungen zum Beschaffen, Verwalten und Nutzen von digitalen und gedruckten Medien.
INTRODUCTION TO COORDINATION CHEMISTRY
An accessible introduction to one of the primary fields of study in Inorganic Chemistry, revised to incorporate contemporary topics and applications
Written in a highly readable, descriptive, and accessible style, Introduction to Coordination Chemistry examines and explains the interaction between metals and molecules that bind as ligands and the consequences of this assembly process. The book describes the chemical and physical properties and behavior of these complex assemblies and their applications. The contents of this book tell a story, taking the reader from fundamentals, including metal ions, ligands, metal-ligand bonding, and structure, to key concepts, such as stability, synthesis and mechanisms, properties, and characterization. Subsequent chapters address applications involving metals in biology, medicine, and industrial chemistry.
Written by two highly qualified academics, this newly revised Second Edition of Introduction to Coordination Chemistry has been thoroughly updated to include full-color images throughout, as well as now including:
Introduction to Coordination Chemistry is an ideal textbook resource for undergraduate inorganic chemistry students in their second or third year or at the intermediate level who have completed a general introductory chemistry course and are moving to a first specialist course in coordination chemistry.
INORGANIC CHEMISTRY ADVANCED TEXTBOOK
This series reflects the pivotal role of modern inorganic and physical chemistry in a whole range of emerging areas, such as materials chemistry, green chemistry and bioinorganic chemistry, as well as providing a solid grounding in established areas such as solid state chemistry, coordination chemistry, main group chemistry and physical inorganic chemistry.
PAUL V. BERNHARDT is a Professor of Chemistry in the School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, University of Queensland, Australia. Professor Bernhardt is a former President of the Royal Australian Chemical Institute (2014-2016) and Chair of its Inorganic Chemistry Division (2007-2010).
GEOFFREY A. LAWRANCE is an Emeritus Professor of Chemistry in the College of Engineering, Science, and Environment at the University of Newcastle, Australia. Professor Lawrance has held academic and visiting positions at several national and European universities.
Preface ix
Acknowledgments x
Preamble xi
About the Companion Website xv
1 The Central Atom 1
1.1 Key Concepts in Coordination Chemistry 1
1.2 A Who's Who of Metal Ions 6
1.3 Metals in Molecules 12
1.4 The Road Ahead 16
2 Complexes 20
2.1 The Central Metal Ion 20
2.2 Metal--Ligand Assembly 22
2.3 The Nature of Bonding in Metal Complexes 28
2.4 Metal--Ligand Bonding in Organometallic Chemistry -- Beyond Classical Werner Complexes 52
2.5 Coupling -- Polymetallic Complexes 59
2.6 Complex Lifetimes and Complexation Consequences 60
3 Ligands 63
3.1 Membership: Being a Ligand 63
3.2 Ligand Basicity 76
3.3 Making Choices 81
3.4 Polydentate Ligands 84
3.5 Polynucleating Ligands 86
3.6 Nonclassical Ligands in Organometallic Chemistry 90
4 Shape 95
4.1 Getting in Shape 95
4.2 Coordination Number and Shape 98
4.3 Influencing Shape 114
4.4 Isomerism -- Real 3D Effects 118
4.5 Sophisticated Shapes 128
4.6 Defining Shape 140
5 Stability 143
5.1 Making a Stable Assembly 143
5.2 Complexation -- Will It Last? 164
5.3 Reaction Mechanisms 167
6 Synthesis 196
6.1 Molecular Creation--Ways to Make Complexes 196
6.2 Core Metal Chemistry--Periodic Table Influences 196
6.3 Reactions Involving the Coordination Shell 203
6.4 Reactions Involving the Metal Oxidation State 216
6.5 Reactions Involving Coordinated Ligands 220
6.6 Organometallic Synthesis 229
6.7 Nanomolecular Synthesis 233
6.8 Silicate and Aluminosilicate Synthesis 238
7 Properties 244
7.1 Investigative Methods 244
7.2 Physical Methods and Outcomes 245
7.3 Probing Complexes Using Physical Methods 250
8 A Complex Life 293
8.1 Metal Ions in the Natural World 293
9 Complexes and Commerce 329
9.1 Metals in Medicine 329
9.2 Medical Imaging and Diagnostics 338
9.3 Analysing with Complexes 342
9.4 Profiting from Complexation 345
9.5 Being Green 355
9.6 Complex Futures 357
Concept Keys 358
Further Reading 358
Appendix One: Nomenclature 360
Appendix Two: Molecular Symmetry: The Point Group 369
Index 375
Coordination chemistry in its 'modern' form has existed for over a century. To identify the foundations of a field is complicated by our distance in time from those events, and we can do little more than draw on a few key events; such is the case with coordination chemistry. Deliberate efforts to prepare and characterise what we now call coordination complexes began in the 19th century, and by 1856 Wolcott Gibbs and Frederick Genth had published their research on what they termed 'the ammonia-cobalt bases', drawing attention to 'a class of salts which for beauty of form and colour . are almost unequalled either among organic or inorganic compounds'. With some foresight, they suggested that 'the subject is by no means exhausted, but that on the contrary there is scarcely a single point which will not amply repay a more extended study'. In 1875, the Danish chemist Sophus Mads Jørgensen developed rules to interpret the structure of the curious group of stable and fairly robust compounds that had been discovered, such as the one of formula CoCl3 · 6NH3. In doing so, he drew on immediately prior developments in organic chemistry, including an understanding of how carbon compounds can consist of chains of linked carbon centres. Jørgensen proposed that the cobalt invariably had three linkages to it to match the valency of the cobalt, but allowed each linkage to include chains of linked ammonia molecules and or chloride ions. In other words, he proposed a carbon-free analogue of carbon chemistry, which itself has a valency of four and formed, apparently invariably, four bonds. At the time this was a good idea and placed metal-containing compounds under the same broad rules as carbon compounds, a commonality for chemical compounds that had great appeal. It was not, however, a great idea. For that the world had to wait for Alfred Werner, working in Switzerland in the early 1890s, who set this class of compounds on a new and quite distinctive course that we know now as coordination chemistry. Interestingly, Jorgensen spent around three decades championing, developing and defending his concepts, but Werner's ideas that effectively allowed more linkages to the metal centre, divorced from its valency, prevailed and proved incisive enough to hold essentially true up to the present day. His influence lives on; in fact, his last research paper actually appeared in 2001, being a determination of the three-dimensional structure of a compound he crystallised in 1909! For his seminal contributions, Werner is properly regarded as the founder of coordination chemistry.
Coordination chemistry is the study of coordination compounds or, as they are often defined, coordination complexes. These entities are distinguished by the involvement, in terms of simple bonding concepts, of one or more coordinate (or dative) covalent bonds, which differ from the traditional covalent bond mainly in the way that we envisage they are formed. Although we are most likely to meet coordination complexes as compounds featuring a metal ion or set of metal ions at their core (and indeed this is where we will overwhelmingly meet examples herein), this is not strictly a requirement, as metalloids may also form such compounds. One of the simplest examples of formation of a coordination compound comes from a now venerable observation - when BF3 gas is passed into a liquid trialkylamine, the two react exothermally to generate a solid which contains equimolar amounts of each precursor molecule. The solid formed has been shown to consist of molecules F3B-NR3, where a routine covalent bond now links the boron and nitrogen centres. However, what is peculiar to this assembly is that electron book-keeping suggests that the boron commences with an empty valence orbital, whereas the nitrogen commences with one lone pair of electrons in an orbital not involved previously in bonding. It was reasoned that the new bond must form by the two lone pair valence electrons on the nitrogen being inserted or donated into the empty orbital on the boron. Of course, the outcome is well known - a situation arises where there is an increase in shared electron density between the joined atom centres, or formation of a covalent bond. It is helpful to reflect on how this situation differs from conventional covalent bond formation; traditionally, we envisage covalent bonds as arising from two atomic centres each providing an electron to form a bond through sharing, whereas in the coordinate covalent bond one centre provides both electrons (the donor) to insert into an empty orbital on the other centre (the acceptor); essentially, you can't tell the difference once the coordinate bond has formed from that which would arise by the usual covalent bond formation. Another very simple example is the reaction between ammonia and a proton; the former can be considered to donate a lone pair of electrons into the empty orbital of the proton. In this case, the acid-base character of the acceptor-donor assembly is perhaps more clearly defined for us through the choice of partners. Conventional Brønsted acids and bases are not central to this field, however; more important is the Lewis definition of an acid and base, as an electron pair acceptor and electron pair donor, respectively.
Today's coordination chemistry is founded on research in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. As mentioned above, the work of French-born Alfred Werner, who spent most of his career in Switzerland at Zürich, lies at the core of the field, as it was he who recognised that there was no required link between metal oxidation state and number of ligands bound. This allowed him to define the highly stable complex formed between cobalt(III) (or Co3+) and six ammonia molecules in terms of a central metal ion surrounded by six bound ammonia molecules, arranged symmetrically and as far apart as possible at the six corners of an octahedron. The key to the puzzle was not the primary valency of the metal ion, but the apparently constant number of donor atoms it supported (its 'coordination number'). This 'magic number' of six for cobalt(III) was confirmed through a wealth of experiments, which led to the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for Werner in 1913. While his discoveries remain firm, modern research has allowed limited examples of cobalt(III) compounds with coordination numbers of five and even four to be prepared and characterised. As it turns out, Nature was well ahead of the game, since some metalloenzymes discovered in recent decades contain metal ions with a low coordination number, which contributes to their reactivity. Metals can show an array of preferred coordination numbers, which vary not only from metal to metal, but can change for a particular metal with formal oxidation state of a metal. Thus, Cu(II) has a greater tendency towards five-coordination than Mn(II), which prefers six-coordination. Moreover, unlike six-coordinate Mn(II), Mn(VII) prefers four-coordination. Behaviour in the solid state may differ from that in solution, as a result of the availability of different potential donors resulting from the solvent itself usually being a possible ligand. Thus, FeCl3 in the solid state consists of Fe(III) centres surrounded octahedrally by six Cl- ions, each shared between two metal centres; in aqueous acidic solution, 'FeCl3' is more likely to be met as separate [Fe(OH2)6]3+ and Cl- ions.
Inherently, whether a coordination compound involves metal or metalloid elements is immaterial to the basic concept. However, one factor that distinguishes the chemistry of the majority of metal complexes is an often incomplete d (for transition metals) or f (for lanthanoids and actinoids) shell of electrons. This leads to the spectroscopic and magnetic properties of members of these groups being particularly indicative of the compound under study and has driven interest in and applications of these coordination complexes. The field is one of immense variety and, dare we say it, complexity. In some metal complexes, it is even not easy to define the formal oxidation state of the central metal ion since electron density may reside on some ligands to the point where it alters the physical behaviour.
What we can conclude is that metal coordination chemistry is a demanding field that will tax your skills as a scientist. Carbon chemistry is, by contrast, comparatively simple, in the sense that essentially all stable carbon compounds have four bonds around each carbon centre. Metals, as a group, can exhibit coordination numbers from 2 to 14, and formal oxidation states that range from negative values to as high as 8. Even for a particular metal, a range of oxidation states, coordination numbers, and distinctive spectroscopic and chemical behaviour associated with each oxidation state may (and usually does) exist.
Because coordination chemistry is the chemistry of the vast majority of the Periodic Table, the metals and metalloids, it is central to the proper study of chemistry. Moreover, since many coordination compounds incorporate organic molecules as ligands, and may influence their reactivity and behaviour, an understanding of organic chemistry is also necessary in this field. Further, since spectroscopic and magnetic properties are central to a proper understanding of coordination compounds, knowledge of an array of physical and analytical methods is important. Of course coordination chemistry is demanding - but it rewards the student by revealing a diversity that can be at once intriguing, attractive and rewarding. Welcome to the wild and wonderful world of coordination...
Dateiformat: ePUBKopierschutz: Adobe-DRM (Digital Rights Management)
Systemvoraussetzungen:
Das Dateiformat ePUB ist sehr gut für Romane und Sachbücher geeignet – also für „fließenden” Text ohne komplexes Layout. Bei E-Readern oder Smartphones passt sich der Zeilen- und Seitenumbruch automatisch den kleinen Displays an. Mit Adobe-DRM wird hier ein „harter” Kopierschutz verwendet. Wenn die notwendigen Voraussetzungen nicht vorliegen, können Sie das E-Book leider nicht öffnen. Daher müssen Sie bereits vor dem Download Ihre Lese-Hardware vorbereiten.Bitte beachten Sie: Wir empfehlen Ihnen unbedingt nach Installation der Lese-Software diese mit Ihrer persönlichen Adobe-ID zu autorisieren!
Weitere Informationen finden Sie in unserer E-Book Hilfe.