ChemistryINC

d-Block, f-Block Elements & Coordination Compounds

Apply concepts from d-Block, f-Block Elements & Coordination Compounds to problem-solving. Focus on numerical practice and real-world applications.

3-4 Qs/year65 minPhase 1 · APPLICATION

Concept Core

This session covers the single highest-yield inorganic topic in NEET. d-Block elements (transition metals) occupy Groups 3-12 with general outer configuration (n-1)d1d^{1}-10 ns0ns^{0}-2. Two critical configuration anomalies exist: Cr is [Ar]3d5  4s13d^{5} \; 4s^{1} (not 3d4  4s23d^{4} \; 4s^{2}) due to half-filled d-orbital stability, and Cu is [Ar]3d10  4s13d^{10} \; 4s^{1} (not 3d9  4s23d^{9} \; 4s^{2}) due to fully-filled d-orbital stability. Transition metals exhibit variable oxidation states, form colored ions (d-d electronic transitions in incompletely filled d-orbitals absorb visible light), are paramagnetic (unpaired electrons), act as catalysts (variable oxidation states and surface adsorption), and form coordination compounds.

KMnO4 (potassium permanganate) behaves differently in each medium: in acidic medium, MnO4-Mn2Mn^{2}+ (colorless, +7 to +2, gains 5 electrons); in neutral medium, MnO4- → MnO2 (brown precipitate, +7 to +4, gains 3 electrons); in basic medium, MnO4-MnO42MnO4^{2}- (green, +7 to +6, gains 1 electron). K2Cr2O7 in acidic medium: Cr2O72Cr2O7^{2}- → 2Cr32Cr^{3}+ (orange to green, +6 to +3).
The chromate-dichromate equilibrium is pH-dependent: CrO42CrO4^{2}- (yellow, basic) <=> Cr2O72Cr2O7^{2}- (orange, acidic).

f-Block elements: Lanthanoids (4f series) predominantly show +3 oxidation state. Lanthanoid contraction is the gradual decrease in ionic radii from La3La^{3}+ to Lu3Lu^{3}+ due to poor shielding by 4f electrons. This contraction makes 4d and 5d elements of the same group nearly identical in size (e.g., Zr and Hf). Actinoids (5f series) show more variable oxidation states (+3 to +6) and are all radioactive.

Coordination Compounds: Werner's theory distinguishes primary valence (oxidation state, ionizable) from secondary valence (coordination number, non-ionizable, directional). Ligands classified by denticity: monodentate (H2O, NH3, Cl-, CN-, CO), bidentate (en = ethylenediamine, ox2ox^{2}- = oxalate), polydentate (EDTA = hexadentate), and ambidentate (NO2-/ONO-, SCN-/NCS-). IUPAC nomenclature lists ligands alphabetically (anionic suffix -o, neutral as-is except aqua, ammine, carbonyl, nitrosyl), metal with Roman numeral oxidation state, cation before anion.

Isomerism types include: geometrical (cis/trans in square planar MA2B2 and octahedral MA4B2), optical (non-superimposable mirror images, e.g., [Co(en)3]3+), linkage (NO2 vs ONO), and ionization ([Co(NH3)5Br]SO4 vs [Co(NH3)5SO4]Br).

VBT distinguishes inner orbital complexes (using (n-1)d orbitals — strong field, low spin) from outer orbital complexes (using nd — weak field, high spin). CFT explains crystal field splitting: in octahedral complexes, d-orbitals split into lower t2g and higher eg with splitting energy Δ\Delta-o; in tetrahedral complexes, splitting is inverted (e lower, t2 higher) with Δ\Delta-t approximately equal to 49\frac{4}{9} Δ\Delta-o. The spectrochemical series orders ligands: I- < Br- < Cl- < F- < OH- < H2O < NH3 < en < NO2- < CN- < CO. Strong field ligands (CN-, CO) cause large Δ\Delta-o, electron pairing, and diamagnetism.

Color arises from d-d transitions: energy of absorbed light equals Δ\Delta-o, and the complementary color is observed.
Magnetic moment μ\mu = n(n+2\sqrt{n(n+2}) BM. Biological coordination compounds include hemoglobin (Fe2Fe^{2}+), chlorophyll (Mg2Mg^{2}+), vitamin B12 (Co3Co^{3}+), and carbonic anhydrase (Zn2Zn^{2}+).

The key testable concept is the crystal field splitting pattern in octahedral versus tetrahedral complexes, the spectrochemical series for predicting spin state, and KMnO4 product identification based on the reaction medium.

Key Testable Concept

The key testable concept is the crystal field splitting pattern in octahedral versus tetrahedral complexes, the spectrochemical series for predicting spin state, and KMnO4 product identification based on the reaction medium.

Comparison Tables

A) KMnO4 Reactions

MediumProductOxidation State ChangeColor ChangeElectrons Gained
AcidicMn2Mn^{2}++7 → +2Purple → Colorless5
NeutralMnO2+7 → +4Purple → Brown ppt3
BasicMnO42MnO4^{2}-+7 → +6Purple → Green1

B) Spectrochemical Series

LigandField StrengthEffect on Δ\Delta-oSpin State
I-WeakestSmallest Δ\Delta-oHigh spin
Br-WeakSmallHigh spin
Cl-WeakSmallHigh spin
F-Weak-mediumModerateUsually high spin
OH-MediumModerateVariable
H2OMediumModerateUsually high spin
NH3StrongLargeLow spin
enStrongLargeLow spin
NO2-StrongLargeLow spin
CN-Very strongVery largeLow spin
COStrongestLargestLow spin

C) Isomerism Types

TypeDefinitionExample ComplexHow to Identify
GeometricalSame formula, different spatial arrangementcis/trans-[Pt(NH3)2Cl2]Look for MA2B2 in sq. planar or MA4B2 in octahedral
OpticalNon-superimposable mirror images[Co(en)3]3+Chelate complexes with no plane of symmetry
LinkageDifferent donor atom of ambidentate ligand[Co(NH3)5(NO2)]2+ vs [Co(NH3)5(ONO)]2+Ambidentate ligands (NO2-, SCN-)
IonizationExchange of ligand and counter ion[Co(NH3)5Br]SO4 vs [Co(NH3)5SO4]BrSame formula, different ions in solution

D) Ligand Classification

LigandDenticityChargeExample Complex
H2O (aqua)Monodentate0[Fe(H2O)6]3+
NH3 (ammine)Monodentate0[Co(NH3)6]3+
Cl- (chlorido)Monodentate-1[CoCl4]2-
CN- (cyanido)Monodentate-1[Fe(CN)6]4-
CO (carbonyl)Monodentate0Ni(CO)4
en (ethylenediamine)Bidentate0[Co(en)3]3+
ox2ox^{2}- (oxalato)Bidentate-2[Fe(ox)3]3-
EDTA4EDTA^{4}-Hexadentate-4[Ca(EDTA)]2-

E) Lanthanoid vs Actinoid

PropertyLanthanoidsActinoids
Subshell filled4f5f
Predominant oxidation state+3+3 to +6 (variable)
ContractionLanthanoid contractionActinoid contraction (more pronounced)
RadioactivityMost non-radioactiveAll radioactive
ChemistrySimple, similarComplex, varied

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