The crucial point about complexation is that these species are formed and held together by covalent bonds between the metal centre and each ligand. They are almost always coordinate covalent bonds, whereby the ligand donates a lone pair of electrons to form the covalent bond, rather than by one electron coming from the ligand and one from the metal.
This sort of bonding to form coordination complexes occurs extensively for metals, whether it be by:
- as hydration shells around cations (like in [Fe(H2O)6]3+, the hexaquairon(III) cation), or
- the blood-red thiocyanatoiron(III) cation FeSCN2+ (more formally, the pentaaquathiocyanatoiron(III) cation [Fe(H2O)5SCN]3+) which actually has the covalent bond from the Fe to the N atom, or
- in biological system likes the binding of oxygen to the iron centre of haemoglobin.
Complexed metals may be physiologically / biochemically very different in their behaviour. For example, the gadolinium contrast agents used in some MRI investigations are 10
6 times less toxic than is a simple gadolinium salt. Ant-cancer drugs like cisplatin are complexes that require the complexed form to access and then to distort DNA in tumour cells.
Complexation can have significant impacts on solubility. For example, silver(I) chloride re-dissolves when ammonia is added as the formation of the diamminesilver(I) cation:
Ag+ (aq) + 2 NH3 (aq) <---> [Ag(NH3)3]+
decreases the concentration of unbound Ag
+ cations in the solution, thereby drawing the solubility equilibrium:
AgCl (s) <----> Ag+ (aq) + Cl- (aq)
to the right, according to Le Chatelier's Principle.
Similarly, aluminium(III) hydroxide is amphoteric as it reactions with acid (obviously) but also with base to form the tetrahydroxyaluminate(III) anion:
Al(OH)3 (s) + OH- (aq) <----> [Al(OH)4]- (aq)
which also explains why insoluble aluminium hydroxide dissolves in a concentration sodium hydroxide solution.