Properties of Transition Metal Compounds - NOT FINISHED

Description

F325 - Transition Metals
siobhan.quirk
Note by siobhan.quirk, updated more than 1 year ago
siobhan.quirk
Created by siobhan.quirk over 10 years ago
170
1

Resource summary

Page 1

Physical Properties shiny high densities high melting and boiling points when solid are giant metallic lattices containing delocalised electrons, so conduct electricity Examples: nickel is alloyed with copper for making 'silver' coins                  titanium is a component of joint replacement parts                  iron used to make telephone boxes and post boxes or is alloyed for use in constructionTransition elements form compounds in which the transition metal has different oxidation states. These compounds form coloured solutions when dissolved in water and frequently catalyse chemical reactions. These properties are a result of the electron configurations of the transition elements - in particular, partially filled d-orbitals. Variable Oxidation StatesThe transition elements from titanium to copper all form ions with two or more oxidation states. They all form compounds with ions in the +2 oxidation state. In most cases, this is the result of losing the two electrons from the 4s orbital. The 4s electrons are lost first because they occupy the highest energy level. However because the 3d and 4s energy levels are so close in energy, the 3d electrons can also be lost when an atom forms a stable ion.

New Page

Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

The Weimar Republic, 1919-1929
shann.w
Globalisation Case Studies
annie
Random German A-level Vocab
Libby Shaw
Sociology: Crime and Deviance Flash cards
Beth Morley
Functionalist Theory of Crime
A M
Realist Theories
A M
Ecosystems
Jessica Phillips
Control, Punishment & Victims
A M
Ethnicity, Crime & Justice
A M
AQA A2 Biology Unit 4: Populations
Charlotte Lloyd
AQA Physics: A2 Unit 4
Michael Priest