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The Challenge of the So-Called Electron Configurations of the Transition Metals

Authors :
H. Fang
W. H. E. Schwarz
Shu-Guang Wang
Yi-Xiang Qiu
Source :
Chemistry - A European Journal. 12:4101-4114
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
Wiley, 2006.

Abstract

Quite different meanings are attached by chemists to the words element, atom, orbital, order of orbitals or configurations. This causes conceptual inconsistencies, in particular with respect to the transition-metal elements and their atoms or ions. The different meanings will here be distinguished carefully. They are analyzed on the basis of empirical atomic spectral data and quasi-relativistic density functional calculations. The latter are quite reliable for different average configuration energies of transition-metal atoms. The so-called "configurations of the chemical elements", traditionally displayed in periodic tables, are the dominant configurations of the lowest spin-orbit levels of the free atoms. They are chemically rather irrelevant. In many-electron systems the ns and np AOs are significantly below the more hydrogen-like nd ones. Even (n+1)s is below nd for all light neutral atoms from C onwards, but only up to the first elements of the respective long rows! The most common orbital order in transition-metal atoms is 3p << 3d < 4s etc. The chemically relevant configuration in group g is always d(g) instead of d(g-2) s(2). Conceptually clear reasoning eliminates apparent textbook inconsistencies between simple quantum-chemical models and the empirical facts. The empirically and theoretically well-founded Rydberg (n-deltal) rule is to be preferred instead of the historical Madelung (n+l) rule with its large number of exceptions.

Details

ISSN :
15213765 and 09476539
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chemistry - A European Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d30aa1113dc529778b979f8d422598f7