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Karnataka Board PUCPUC Science 2nd PUC Class 12

Important Terms Pertaining to Coordination Compounds

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Estimated time: 6 minutes
CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: Important Terms Pertaining to Coordination Compounds

Ligands:

Ligands are the donor atoms, molecules, or anions that donate a pair of electrons to the metal atom or ion and form a coordinate bond. The number of coordinating or ligating groups present in a ligand is called the denticity of that ligand.

 
Type Description Examples
(i) Unidentate / Monodentate Binds through one donor atom Cl⁻, H₂O, NH₃, NO
(ii) Didentate / Bidentate Binds through two donor atoms en (ethane-1,2-diamine), C₂O₄²⁻ (oxalate)
(iii) Polydentate Several donor atoms in a single ligand N(CH₂CH₂NH₂)₃
(iv) Ambidentate Two different donor atoms, either of which can coordinate NO₂⁻ (through N or O), SCN⁻ (through S or N), NCS⁻
(v) Chelating Forms a ring structure with the central atom; polydentate chelate complexes are more stable than monodentate analogues EDTA (hexadentate), en (bidentate), C₂O₄²⁻

NH₄⁺ is NOT a ligand — the N atom in NH₄⁺ has no lone pair of electrons to donate (lone pair has been donated to H⁺). Thiosulphato (S₂O₃²⁻) is an ambidentate ligand, NOT a chelating ligand.

Coordination Number:

The coordination number (CN) of a metal ion in a complex is the total number of unidentate ligands (plus double the number of didentate ligands if any) attached to the central metal ion through coordinate bonds.

Homoleptic vs Heteroleptic Complexes:

  1. Homoleptic complexes: Metal is bound to only one kind of donor group. e.g., [Co(NH₃)₆]³⁺
  2. Heteroleptic complexes: Metal is bound to more than one kind of donor group. e.g., [Co(NH₃)₄Cl₂]⁺

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Coordination Compounds part 4 (Double Salt and Coordination entity) [00:09:51]
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