Chemistry SL
Chemistry SL
6
Chapters
243
Notes
Chapter 1 - Models Of The Particulate Nature Of Matter
Chapter 1 - Models Of The Particulate Nature Of Matter
Chapter 2 - Models Of Bonding & Structure
Chapter 2 - Models Of Bonding & Structure
Chapter 3 - Classification Of Matter
Chapter 3 - Classification Of Matter
Chapter 4 - What Drives Chemical Reactions?
Chapter 4 - What Drives Chemical Reactions?
Chapter 5 - How Much, How Fast & How Far?
Chapter 5 - How Much, How Fast & How Far?
Chapter 6 - What Are The Mechanisms Of Chemical Change?
Chapter 6 - What Are The Mechanisms Of Chemical Change?
IB Resources
Chapter 2 - Models Of Bonding & Structure
Chemistry SL
Chemistry SL

Chapter 2 - Models Of Bonding & Structure

Unlocking The Secrets Of Coordination Bonds In Transition Metals

Word Count Emoji
402 words
Reading Time Emoji
3 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Key term jingle - 🎸

Transition metals? Complex ions, they form! With ligands around, coordination bonds are the norm!

Big idea - 🚀

When you think of transition metals, think of them as popular celebrities surrounded by their adoring fans (the ligands). These fans are SO attached to the celeb that they give them special gifts - lone pairs of electrons. This connection or gift forms a coordination bond.

Imagine this - 🎨

Let's say a transition metal like Iron (Fe) is the lead singer in a rock band (🎤Fe & The Ligands🎸). Every fan (ligand) wants to give Iron a high-five (lone pair of electrons). That high-five is basically the coordination bond.

Nitty-gritty details - 🤓

  • Complex Ions: These are fancy structures formed by transition metals. At the center, you've got the metal cation (think: the celebrity) and surrounding them are the ligands (their fans).
  • Ligands: No, they're not just simple fans. These are atoms or groups of atoms with a special gift: a lone pair of electrons. They use this gift to form a coordination bond with the metal ion.

🍎 Real-World Example: 🍎 It's like how a magnet attracts paper clips. The transition metal is like a magnet, and the ligands are like paper clips. The attraction is the coordination bond!

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IB Resources
Chapter 2 - Models Of Bonding & Structure
Chemistry SL
Chemistry SL

Chapter 2 - Models Of Bonding & Structure

Unlocking The Secrets Of Coordination Bonds In Transition Metals

Word Count Emoji
402 words
Reading Time Emoji
3 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Key term jingle - 🎸

Transition metals? Complex ions, they form! With ligands around, coordination bonds are the norm!

Big idea - 🚀

When you think of transition metals, think of them as popular celebrities surrounded by their adoring fans (the ligands). These fans are SO attached to the celeb that they give them special gifts - lone pairs of electrons. This connection or gift forms a coordination bond.

Imagine this - 🎨

Let's say a transition metal like Iron (Fe) is the lead singer in a rock band (🎤Fe & The Ligands🎸). Every fan (ligand) wants to give Iron a high-five (lone pair of electrons). That high-five is basically the coordination bond.

Nitty-gritty details - 🤓

  • Complex Ions: These are fancy structures formed by transition metals. At the center, you've got the metal cation (think: the celebrity) and surrounding them are the ligands (their fans).
  • Ligands: No, they're not just simple fans. These are atoms or groups of atoms with a special gift: a lone pair of electrons. They use this gift to form a coordination bond with the metal ion.

🍎 Real-World Example: 🍎 It's like how a magnet attracts paper clips. The transition metal is like a magnet, and the ligands are like paper clips. The attraction is the coordination bond!

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Chemistry SL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟