toknblackguy
Member
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2003
- Messages
- 299
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2003
why are transition metals in high oxidation states strong oxidants?
The "instability" of a high oxidation state can be associated with the enormous energy that would be required to form the highly charged cation with the charge defined by the oxidation state. The total energy that would be required to form the true Fe6+ cation in the gas phase, for example, would be 27,407 kJ mol-1 ! To stabilise such a species, "charge return" in some form is necessary and one way to do this is to form a "coordinate" bond, since the donation of a lone pair by the ligand amounts to donating one electron to the Lewis acid (assuming equal "sharing" in the bond, which may, of course be far from the truth). The Lewis base must be a rather good donor, since the charge demand is so high, but it must also be rather resistant to oxidation in order to prevent the metal simply "stripping away" some electrons.Originally posted by toknblackguy
ok then
that seems to be the consensus
there's no real techie explanaiton
oh well
hopefully it won't even come up in the exam
thanks