1 / 40

Marvellous Metals

Marvellous Metals. Nyholm Lecture 2002 Professor Tony Baker & Dr Linda Xiao Faculty of Science, UTS. Sir Ronald Nyholm 1917-1971. Coordination Chemist Inspiring Chemical Educator Leader of the Profession. Sponsorship.

lamya
Télécharger la présentation

Marvellous Metals

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Marvellous Metals • Nyholm Lecture 2002 • Professor Tony Baker & • Dr Linda Xiao • Faculty of Science, UTS

  2. Sir Ronald Nyholm 1917-1971 • Coordination Chemist • Inspiring Chemical Educator • Leader of the Profession

  3. Sponsorship • The Royal Australian Chemical Institute (RACI) www.chem.unsw.edu.au/raci • Crown Scientific • APS

  4. Marvellous Metals: the Lecture • Redox Chemistry • Spectra and Spectroscopy • Coordination Chemistry

  5. Redox Chemistry • Many reactions can be classified as redox reactions. • These are reactions in which the oxidation numbers of the elements involved change

  6. Example: Redox Chemistry • An acidified solution of permanganate ions reacts with hydrogen peroxide to give dioxygen gas: • 2 MnO4- + 6 H+ + 5 H2O2 • 2Mn2+ + 8 H2O + 5 O2 • Mn +7  +2; O (in peroxide) –1  0

  7. Vanadium • Vanadium is a transition element that displays a maximum oxidation state of +5 (eg in the oxide V2O5). • Named after Vanadis, the Norse goddess of beauty because of the beautiful colours in solution • Used in high strength steels

  8. Vanadium reduction: demo • Initial: solid NH4VO3 • Acidification: • VO3- + 2 H+ VO2+ + H2O • Reduction (Zn as reductant): • VO2+ + 2 H+ + e- VO2+ + H2O • VO2+ + 2 H+ + e- V3+ + H2O • V3+ + e- V2+

  9. Vanadium Application • Sulfuric Acid Manufacture: • SO2 (g) + ½ O2 (g) SO3 (g) • Vanadium(V) oxide catalysts are used in this process. • Sulfuric acid: 150 million tonnes produced each year.

  10. Other redox processes • The rusting of iron • Batteries • Electrolysis to purify metals • Using reductants to liberate metals from ores

  11. Photoreduction: Blueprint • Blueprints (an early form of copying) were first made around 1840 • 2 [Fe(C2O4)3]3- 2 Fe2+ + 2 CO2 + 5 C2O42- • (K+ +) Fe2+ + [Fe(CN)6]3- Prussian Blue • The pigment Prussian Blue has been known since 1704

  12. More on Prussian Blue • Fe3+ + [Fe(CN)6]4- Prussian Blue • Fe2+ + [Fe(CN)6]3- Turnbull’s Blue • Found to have same spectra / XRD. • Colour arises from charge transfer: • Fe3+ + e  Fe2+ (lmax 700nm). • Probable formula: Fe(III)4[Fe(II)(CN)6]3.15H2O

  13. Spectra and Spectroscopy • Spectrum: solar spectrum, rainbow • Plot of radiation intensity vs. wavelength / frequency • May be absorption or emission

  14. Uses of Spectroscopy • Identification • Quantification • Study bonding / energy levels • X-ray: inner shell electrons • UV-Vis: outer shell electrons • IR: molecular vibrations • Microwave: rotations

  15. Vanadium check-up • VO2+ yellow • VO2+ blue • V3+ green • V2+ violet

  16. Emission Spectra

  17. Flame tests • Lithium • Sodium • Potassium • Calcium • Strontium • Barium • Copper

  18. Flame tests • The thermal energy is enough to shift electrons to higher energy levels (excited state). • The electron returns to a lower energy level with emission of visible radiation.

  19. Absorption spectra

  20. Absorption: demonstration

  21. Absorption and colour • The copper solution appears blue and absorbs red light. • Under white light illumination some wavelengths are absorbed and some are reflected / transmitted. • The object / solution has the complementary colour to the radiation absorbed.

  22. Atomic absorption • Atoms in the ground state will absorb radiation that promotes electrons to an excited state. • The amount of radiation absorbed is proportional to the the number of atoms present. • This concept is the basis of Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy (AAS).

  23. AAS: schematic diagram

  24. AAS: Australia’s contribution • Alan Walsh had worked on emission spectra and molecular spectroscopy. • Demonstrated possibility of AAS in early 1952. • Developed commercially by CSIRO and Australian instrument manufacturers

  25. AAS: application • AAS was long considered the best technique for trace metal analysis. • Detection Limits (ppb): • Cd 1 • Cr 3 • Cu 2 • Pb 10 • V 20

  26. Vanadium: one more time • VO2+ yellow • VO2+ blue • V3+ green • V2+ violet

  27. Coordination Chemistry • ….it is correct to say that modern inorganic chemistry is, especially in solution, the study of complex compounds. • Nyholm, The Renaissance of Inorganic Chemistry, 1956

  28. Dissolution of a salt • Water binds to ions at edges of lattice • When bonds to water are stronger than bonds to ions, the ion enters solution

  29. Examples • Nickel(II) ions in solution: Ni2+(aq). • Species in solution is [Ni(H2O)6]2+. • Other examples would include [Cu(H2O)6]2+, [Fe(H2O)6]3+, etc.

  30. Shapes of Complexes • 6-coordinate: Octahedral • 4-coordinate: Tetrahedral • Demonstration: • [Co(H2O)6]2+ + 4 Cl- • [CoCl4]2- + 6 H2O

  31. Changing shapes: demo • [Co(H2O)6]2+ + 4 Cl- [CoCl4]2- + 6 H2O • pink blue

  32. Coordinate Bond • Many molecules and ions have lone pairs of electrons (eg NH3) and can act as electron pair donors (Lewis bases). • Transition metal ions can have vacant orbitals and can accept electron pairs (Lewis acids).

  33. Ligands • The molecules or ions that bind to a metal ion are known as ligands. • Many ligands are known ranging from monoatomic ions such as chloride to huge protein molecules. • Examples include NH3, H2O, NH2CH2CH2NH2 (diaminoethane, a chelating ligand), SCN- (thiocyanate)

  34. Nickel(II) Complexes: Demo • [Ni(H2O)6]2+ green • [Ni(NH3)6]2+ blue • [Ni(NH2CH2CH2NH2)3]2+ blue-purple • [Ni(dmg)2] red

  35. Colours of Metals Complexes • In an octahedral complex, the d orbitals are split into two energy levels separated by a gap Do. • The size of Do depends on the nature of the ligand.

  36. Differing interactions • Different metals react in different ways with the same ligand. • One example is the difference in interaction of Ni2+ and Co2+ with SCN-. • In the case of cobalt a stable complex ion is formed [Co(SCN)4]2- which is soluble in some organic solvents.

  37. Demonstration • A mixture of Ni2+ and Co2+ is treated with excess SCN-. • 2-Butanone (CH3COCH2CH3) is used to extract the reaction mixture. • Nickel ions remain in the aqueous phase and cobalt ions (as [Co(SCN)4]2-) are extracted into the organic phase.

  38. Application • Many extractive metallurgical processes depend on different metals interacting in different ways with ligands. • Copper can be purified through a solvent extraction technique. • Treatment of 107 tonnes per year of low grade tailings (1%) recovers a further 105 tonnes of copper.

  39. Thermite: Return to Redox • The thermite reaction can be used for such applications as welding in remote locations and depends on the activity of aluminium. • Aluminium powder and iron oxide are mixed together and the reaction is started with burning Mg ribbon. • Highly exothermic reaction!

  40. Thermite Thermodynamics

More Related