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प्रश्न
Apply the crystal field theory to the tetrahedral complex.
विस्तार में उत्तर
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उत्तर
In a tetrahedral complex, a central metal ion is surrounded by four ligands positioned at the corners of a tetrahedron.
- d-Orbital Splitting Pattern: The five d-orbitals split into two energy levels but in reverse compared to octahedral complexes:
- Higher energy: dxy, dyz, dxz
- Lower energy: dx2−y2, dz2
- Cause of Splitting: In a tetrahedral arrangement, ligands approach the metal ion between the coordinate axes. As a result, the d-orbitals orientated between the axes (dxy, dyz, dxz) experience greater repulsion and are raised to a higher energy level.
- Crystal Field Splitting Energy (Δt): The energy gap in tetrahedral complexes is denoted as Δt. Because Δt is relatively small, electron pairing is less favorable, and most tetrahedral complexes are high-spin, with more unpaired electrons.
- Electron Filling in Tetrahedral Fields: Electrons fill the t2 (lower) set first, then the e (higher) set. Due to small Δt, electrons tend to avoid pairing. As a result, electrons remain unpaired as much as possible, leading to maximum unpaired electrons and paramagnetic behavior.
- Example: [MnCl4]2− in this complex, manganese is in the +2 oxidation state (Mn2+), with an electronic configuration of 3d5. Chloride (Cl⁻) is a weak-field ligand, resulting in a small crystal field splitting energy (Δt). Due to the small Δt, the complex is high-spin, and all five d-electrons remain unpaired. Therefore, [MnCl4]2− is strongly paramagnetic and coloured.
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