CHEM2101 (C 21J) Inorganic Chemistry - Chemistry of Transition
Metal Complexes.
24 Lectures 2010/2011
Objectives
Course information is available through
OurVLE and
http://wwwchem.uwimona.edu.jm/courses. These
provide the objectives and further details on the lectures, tutorials and
laboratory sessions as well as examples of past examination papers.
1. Review of Crystal Field Theory.
2. Spectroscopic properties of first row
transition metal complexes.
3. Magnetic Susceptibilities of first row
transition metal complexes.
4. General properties (physical and
chemical) of the 3d transition metals.
5. A survey of the chemistry of some of the
elements Ti....Cu,
which will include the following topics:
-
Occurrence, extraction,
biological significance,
reactions and uses
-
Redox reactions,
effects of pH on the simple aqua ions
- Simple oxides, halides and other
simple binary compounds.
- Preparation, structures, physical properties,
reactions, uses of a variety of simple coordination complexes, eg acacs,
acetates, amines, etc.
Usually, only three or four elements will be covered in detail in any year.
See the individual notes covering, for example:
Titanium,
Vanadium,
Chromium, (Cr PDF file),
Manganese,
Iron, (Fe PDF file),
Cobalt, (Co PDF file),
Nickel, (Ni PDF file),
and Copper, (Cu PDF file)
An earlier collection of these notes in one PDF file
6.
Reaction Mechanisms.
- Stability and inertness, rates and mechanisms.
- Classification of inorganic reaction mechanisms.
Molecularity in relation to substitution reactions.
- Square planar substitution; evidence for the 'A'
mechanism. The trans- effect.
- Octahedral substitution: aquation, anation and base hydrolysis.
- Electron transfer reactions - inner/outer sphere.
7.
Transition metal organometallics.
- Carbonyls and other π-acceptor ligands;
syntheses, structures and bonding and reactions.
- The Effective Atomic Number (EAN) rule.
- Organic ligands: alkyls, alkenes, π-allyls
and aromatic ligands, including cyclopentadiene.
- A discussion of synthetic methods, structural
and bonding aspects, physical properties, stabilities and
important reactions.
- Catalysis and important industrial uses.
References:
"Inorganic Chemistry", 3rd Edition, Catherine Housecroft, Alan G. Sharpe,
Publisher: Prentice Hall, 2008, Paperback, 1098 pages, ISBN13: 978-0-13-175553-6
"Complexes and First-Row Transition Elements", D. Nicholls
"Basic Inorganic Chemistry", F.A. Cotton, G. Wilkinson and P.L. Gaus
"Advanced Inorganic Chemistry", F.A. Cotton, G. Wilkinson, C. A. Murillo, and M. Bochmann
"Physical Inorganic Chemistry, A Coordination Chemistry Approach", S.F.A. Kettle
"Chemistry of the Elements", Greenwood and Earnshaw
"Concepts and Models of Inorganic Chemistry", Douglas, McDaniel and Alexander
"Inorganic Chemistry", 3rd Edition, Miessler and Tarr, Publisher: Prentice Hall:
2004, ISBN-10: 0130354716, ISBN-13: 9780130354716
Review the CHEM2101 (C21J) course objectives
Tutorial questions and some answers
as well as some past exam papers are available.
A 36 hour laboratory program
has been developed for this course that involves preparation of some
simple complexes, determination of a magnetic moment, collection of
IR and Visible spectra and treatment of Visible spectra using
Tanabe-Sugano diagrams.
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Lancashire, all rights reserved.
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Lancashire,
The Department of Chemistry, University of the West Indies,
Mona Campus, Kingston 7, Jamaica.
Created Jan 1999. Links checked and/or last
modified 23rd November 2010.
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