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Thedblock

The document discusses the key properties and characteristics of transition metals. It begins by explaining that the d-block consists of three horizontal periods with 10 elements in each. Transition metals have an incomplete d subshell which gives them variable oxidation states and allows them to act as effective catalysts. The document then goes into detail about the electronic configurations of the first row of the d-block, and how this relates to their positions in the periodic table. It also discusses the variable oxidation states of transition metals and how this is influenced by their ionization energies. Finally, it notes that transition metals are good catalysts due to their ability to change oxidation states through gaining or losing d- and s-electrons.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views

Thedblock

The document discusses the key properties and characteristics of transition metals. It begins by explaining that the d-block consists of three horizontal periods with 10 elements in each. Transition metals have an incomplete d subshell which gives them variable oxidation states and allows them to act as effective catalysts. The document then goes into detail about the electronic configurations of the first row of the d-block, and how this relates to their positions in the periodic table. It also discusses the variable oxidation states of transition metals and how this is influenced by their ionization energies. Finally, it notes that transition metals are good catalysts due to their ability to change oxidation states through gaining or losing d- and s-electrons.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 32

The d block:

• The d block consists of three horizontal


series in periods 4, 5 & 6
– 10 elements in each series
– Chemistry is “different” from other
elements
– Special electronic configurations important
• Differences within a group in the d block are
less sharp than in s & p block
• Similarities across a period are greater

SS CI 11.5 The d block 1


Electronic Configuration
• Across the 1st row of the d block
(Sc to Zn) each element
– has 1 more electron and 1 more proton
– Each “additional” electron enters the
3d sub-shell
– The core configuration for all the
period 4 transition elements is that of
Ar
• 1s22s22p63s23p6

SS CI 11.5 The d block 2


Energy
4p

3d
4s

3p

3s

2p

2s
Ar
1s 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6
SS CI 11.5 The d block 3
Energy
4p

3d
4s

3p

3s

2p

2s
Sc

1s 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 3d1 4s2


SS CI 11.5 The d block 4
Electronic Arrangement
Element Z 3d 4s
Sc 21 [Ar]  
Ti 22 [Ar]   
V 23 [Ar]    
Cr 24 [Ar]      
Mn 25 [Ar]      
Fe 26 [Ar]      
Co 27 [Ar]      
Ni 28 [Ar]      
Cu 29 [Ar]      
Zn 30 [Ar]      
SS CI 11.5 The d block 5
Chromium and Copper
• Cr and Cu don’t fit the pattern of
building up the 3d sub-shell, why?
– In the ground state electrons are always
arranged to give lowest total energy
– Electrons are negatively charged and repel
each other
– Lower total energy is obtained with e- singly
in orbitals rather than if they are paired in
an orbital
– Energies of 3d and 4s orbitals very close
together in Period 4

SS CI 11.5 The d block 6


Chromium and Copper

• At Cr
– Orbital energies such that putting one
e- into each 3d and 4s orbital gives
lower energy than having 2 e- in the
4s orbital
• At Cu
– Putting 2 e- into the 4s orbital would
give a higher energy than filling the
3d orbitals

SS CI 11.5 The d block 7


Energy
4p

3d
4s

3p

3s

2p

2s
Cr

1s 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 3d5 4s1


SS CI 11.5 The d block 8
Energy
4p

3d
4s

3p

3s

2p

2s
Cu

1s 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 3d10 4s1


SS CI 11.5 The d block 9
What is a transition metal?
• Transition metals [TM’s] have
characteristic properties
– e.g. coloured compounds, variable oxidation
states
• These are due to presence of an inner
incomplete d sub-shell
• Electrons from both inner d sub-shell
and outer s sub-shell can be involved in
compound formation
SS CI 11.5 The d block 10
What is a transition metal?
• Not all d block elements have
incomplete d sub-shells
– e.g. Zn has e.c. of [Ar]3d104s2, the
Zn2+ ion ([Ar] 3d10) is not a typical TM
ion
– Similarly Sc forms Sc3+ which has the
stable e.c of Ar. Sc3+ has no 3d
electrons

SS CI 11.5 The d block 11


What is a transition metal?
• For this reason, a transition metal
is defined as being an element
which forms at least one ion with a
partially filled sub-shell of d
electrons.
– In period 4 only Ti-Cu are TM’s!
– Note that when d block elements form
ions the s electrons are lost first

SS CI 11.5 The d block 12


What are TM’s like?
• TM’s are metals
• They are similar to each other but
different from s block metals eg Na and
Mg
• Properties of TM’s
– Dense metals
– Have high Tm and Tb
– Tend to be hard and durable
– Have high tensile strength
– Have good mechanical properties

SS CI 11.5 The d block 13


What are TM’s like?
• Properties derive from strong metallic
bonding
• TM’s can release e- into the pool of mobile
electrons from both outer and inner shells
– Strong metallic bonds formed between the
mobile pool and the +ve metal ions
– Enables widespread use of TMs!
– Alloys very important: inhibits slip in crystal
lattice usually results in increased hardness
and reduced malleability

SS CI 11.5 The d block 14


Effect of Alloying on TM’s

SS CI 11.5 The d block 15


TM Chemical Properties
• Typical chemical properties of the
TM’s are
– Formation of compounds in a variety of
oxidation states
– Catalytic activity of the elements and
their compounds
– Strong tendency to form complexes
• See CI 11.6
– Formation of coloured compounds
• See CI 11.6
SS CI 11.5 The d block 16
Variable Oxidation States
• TM’s show a great variety of
oxidation states cf s block metals
• If compare successive ionisation
enthalpies (Hi) for Ca and V as
follows
M(g)  M+(g) + e- Hi(1)
M+(g)  M2+(g) + e- Hi(2)
M2+(g)  M3+(g) + e- Hi(3)
M3+(g)  M4+(g) + e- Hi(4)
SS CI 11.5 The d block 17
Hi for Ca and V
Ionisation Enthalpies
[kJ mol-1]
Element
Hi(1) Hi(2) Hi(3) Hi(4)

Ca [Ar]4s2 +596 +1152 +4918 +6480

V [Ar]3d34s2 +656 +1420 +2834 +4513

SS CI 11.5 The d block 18


Hi for Ca and V
• Both Ca & V always lose the 4s electrons
• For Ca
 Hi(1) & Hi(2) relatively low as corresponds
to removing outer 4s e-
– Sharp increase in Hi(3) & Hi(4) cf Hi(2)
due to difficulty in removing 3p e-
• For Sc
– Gradual increase from Hi(1) to Hi(4) as
removing 4s then 3d e-

SS CI 11.5 The d block 19


Oxidation States of TM’s
• In the following table
– Most important OS’s in boxes
– OS = +1 only important for Cu
– In all others sum of Hi(1) + Hi(2)
low enough for 2e- to be removed
– OS = +2, where 4s e- lost shown by
all except for Sc and Ti
– OS = +3, shown by all except Zn

SS CI 11.5 The d block 20


Oxidation States of TM’s
S Ti V C M F C N C Z
c r n e o i u n
+1

+2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2 +2

+3 +3 +3 +3 +3 +3 +3 +3 +3

+4 +4 +4

+5

+6 +6 +6

+7 SS CI 11.5 The d block 21


Oxidation States of TM’s
• No of OS’s shown by an element
increases from Sc to Mn
– In each of these elements highest OS is
equal to no. of 3d and 4s e-
• After Mn decrease in no. of OS’s shown
by an element
– Highest OS shown becomes lower and less
stable
– Seems increasing nuclear charge binds 3d e-
more strongly, hence harder to remove

SS CI 11.5 The d block 22


Oxidation States of TM’s
• In general
– Lower OS’s found in simple ionic
compounds
• E.g. compounds containing Cr3+, Mn2+, Fe3+,
Cu2+ ions
– TM’s in higher OS’s usually covalently
bound to electronegative element such
as O or F
• E.g VO3-, vanadate(V) ion; MnO4-,
manganate(VII) ion
• Simple ions with high OS’s such as V5+ &
Mn7+ are not formed
SS CI 11.5 The d block 23
Stability of OS’s
• Change from one OS to another is a
redox reaction
• Relative stability of different OS’s
can be predicted by looking at
Standard Electrode Potentials
– E values

SS CI 11.5 The d block 24


Stability of OS’s
• General trends
– Higher OS’s become less stable
relative to lower ones on moving from
left to right across the series
– Compounds containing TM’s in high OS’s
tend to be oxidising agents e.g MnO4-
– Compounds with TM’s in low OS’s are
often reducing agents e.g V2+ & Fe2+

SS CI 11.5 The d block 25


Stability of OS’s
• General trends (continued)
– Relative stability of +2 state with respect to
+3 state increases across the series
– For compounds early in the series, +2 state
highly reducing
• E.g. V2+(aq) & Cr2+(aq) strong reducing agents
– Later in series +2 stable, +3 state highly
oxidising
• E.g. Co3+ is a strong oxidising agent, Ni3+ & Cu3+ do
not exist in aqueous solution.

SS CI 11.5 The d block 26


Catalytic Activity
• TM’s and their compounds effective and
important catalysts
– Industrially and biologically!!
• The “people in the know” believe
– catalysts provide reaction pathway with lower
EA than uncatalysed reaction (see CI 10.5)
• Once again,
– availability of 3d and 4s e-
– ability to change OS
– among factors which make TM’s such good
catalysts

SS CI 11.5 The d block 27


Heterogeneous Catalysis
• Catalyst in different phase from reactants
– Usually means solid TM catalyst with reactants
in liquid or gas phases
• TM’s can
– use the 3d and 4s e- of atoms on metal
surface to from weak bonds to the reactants.
– Once reaction has occurred on TM surface,
these bonds can break to release products
• Important example is hydrogenation of
alkenes using Ni or Pt catalyst

SS CI 11.5 The d block 28


Heterogeneous Catalysis

SS CI 11.5 The d block 29


Homogeneous Catalysis
• Catalyst in same phase as reactants
– Usually means reaction takes place in
aqueous phase
– Catalyst aqueous TM ion
• Usually involves
– TM ion forming intermediate compound
with ome or more of the reactants
– Intermediate then breaks down to
form products
SS CI 11.5 The d block 30
Homogeneous Catalysis
O
HO H C
C O OH O + O
+ 3 HO 2 C 2 HC + 4 OH2
C O O
HO H C O

O
• Above reaction is that used in
Activity SS5.2
– 2,3-dihydroxybutanoate ion with
hydrogen peroxide
– Reaction catalysed by Co2+

SS CI 11.5 The d block 31


Suggested Mechanism
REACTANTS INTERMEDIATE
H2O2 + Co2+ reduces containing
-
O2CCH(OH)CH(OH)C02- H2O2 & gets Co3+ (green)
oxidised to
Co2+ (pink) Co3+ Co3+ oxidises
2,3-
hydroxy-
Regenerated PRODUCTS butanoate &
Catalyst gets
CO2, methanoate, H2O reduced to
Co2+
Co2+ (pink)

SS CI 11.5 The d block 32

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