Chapter 24 Flashcards

(35 cards)

1
Q

Q: What makes an element a transition metal

A

A: It must form an ion with an incomplete d sub-shell.

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2
Q

Q: When transition metals form ions, which electrons are lost first?

A

A: The 4s electrons are lost before the 3d electrons.

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3
Q

Q: What is the electron configuration of Ni²⁺?

A

A: [Ar] 4s⁰ 3d⁸ — because 4s electrons are lost first

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4
Q

Q: Why isn’t Zn classed as a transition metal?

A

A: Because Zn²⁺ has a complete d orbital (3d¹⁰), so it doesn’t have an incomplete d level in its ions.

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5
Q

Q: Why isn’t Sc a transition metal?

A

A: Sc³⁺ has an empty d orbital (3d⁰), so it doesn’t meet the incomplete d orbital requirement

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6
Q

Q: Name four typical characteristics of transition metals.

A

Form coloured ions

Show variable oxidation states

Can form complex ions

Have catalytic activity

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7
Q

Q: What is a ligand?

A

A: An atom, ion or molecule that donates a lone pair to a metal ion.

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8
Q

Q: What is coordinate bonding?

A

A: A covalent bond where both shared electrons come from the same atom (the ligand)

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9
Q

Q: What does coordination number mean?

A

A: The number of coordinate bonds formed by the central metal ion.

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10
Q

Q: What is the difference between monodentate and bidentate ligands?

A

A:

Monodentate: binds through only one atom

Bidentate: binds through two atoms (two lone pairs)

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11
Q

Q: What is a multidentate ligand?

A

A: A ligand that can form more than two coordinate bonds to the metal ion.

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12
Q

Q: What shape do complexes with coordination number 6 usually have?

A

A: Octahedral.

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13
Q

Q: What shape do complexes with coordination number 4 usually have?

A

A: Tetrahedral or square planar.

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14
Q

Which metals commonly form square planar complexes?

A

A: Platinum (Pt) and Nickel (Ni).

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15
Q

Q: Give an example of an octahedral complex ion.

A

A:
[𝐶𝑢(𝐻2𝑂)6]2+

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16
Q

Q: Give an example of a tetrahedral complex ion.

A

A: [𝐶𝑜𝐶𝑙4]2-

17
Q

Q: Why do transition metal ions have colour?

A

A: Because d–d electron transitions absorb certain wavelengths of visible light.

18
Q

Q: Why must the d sub-shell be incomplete for colour?

A

A: Because electrons need empty d orbitals to jump into.

19
Q

Q: What colour is observed from a transition metal complex?

A

A: The complementary colour of the light absorbed.

20
Q

Q: Why are Zn²⁺ and Sc³⁺ ions colourless?

A

A: They have no d–d transitions (full or empty d subshell).

21
Q

Q: What is a ligand substitution reaction?

A

A: A reaction where one ligand replaces another in a complex ion.

22
Q

Q: What happens when excess ammonia is added to
[𝐶𝑢(𝐻2𝑂)6]2+?

A

A: Water ligands are replaced to form [𝐶𝑢(𝑁𝐻3)4(𝐻2𝑂)2]2+

23
Q

Q: What colour change occurs when ammonia is added to aqueous Cu²⁺?

A

A: Pale blue → deep blue.

24
Q

at colour change occurs when chloride ions replace water in Cu²⁺ complexes?

A

A: Blue → yellow/green

25
Q: Why do transition metals have variable oxidation states?
A: Because 4s and 3d electrons have similar energies
26
Q: Give two common oxidation states of iron.
A: +2 and +3.
27
Q: Which oxidation state of iron is more stable in aqueous solution?
A: Fe³⁺.
28
29
Q: Why are transition metals good catalysts?
A: They can change oxidation state and adsorb reactants.
30
Homogeneous vs hetergeneous
homo-catalyst is in the same phase as the reactants hetero- catalyst is in a different phase to the reactants
31
example of transition metal used in heterogenous catalysts
iron in the Haber process
32
example of homogenous catalysis involving transition metals
Fe2+/Fe3+ ions catalysing reactions in solution
33
Q: Why do transition metals readily take part in redox reactions?
A: Because they can gain or lose electrons easily.
34
Q: What is disproportionation?
A: When the same species is both oxidised and reduced.
35
Q: Give an example of a disproportionation reaction involving Cu⁺.
A: 2Cu⁺ → Cu²⁺ + Cu(s)