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Coordination Compounds

CBSE · Class 12 · Chemistry

Flashcards for Coordination Compounds — CBSE Class 12 Chemistry. Quick Q&A cards covering key concepts, definitions, and formulas.

90 questions20 flashcards5 concepts
20 Flashcards
Card 1Werner's Theory

According to Werner's theory, what are primary and secondary valences? Give an example with CoCl₃·6NH₃.

Answer

Primary valence = ionizable bonds (oxidation state). Secondary valence = non-ionizable bonds (coordination number). Example: [Co(NH₃)₆]Cl₃ - Co³⁺ has primary valence 3 (satisfied by 3Cl⁻) and secondar

Card 2Oxidation States

Calculate the oxidation state of chromium in [Cr(NH₃)₄Cl₂]Cl

Answer

Step 1: Identify charges - NH₃ = 0, Cl⁻ = -1, overall charge = +1 Step 2: Let oxidation state of Cr = x Step 3: x + 4(0) + 2(-1) = +1 Step 4: x - 2 = +1 Step 5: x = +3 Answer: Chromium is in +3 oxidat

Card 3Basic Definitions

What is the difference between coordination number and oxidation number? Explain with [Fe(CN)₆]³⁻.

Answer

Coordination number = number of ligand donor atoms directly bonded to metal. Oxidation number = charge on metal if all ligands removed. In [Fe(CN)₆]³⁻: Coordination number = 6 (six CN⁻ ligands), Oxida

Card 4Complex Formation

Write the formation reaction of [Cu(NH₃)₄]²⁺ complex and identify the Lewis acid and Lewis base.

Answer

Cu²⁺(aq) + 4NH₃(aq) → [Cu(NH₃)₄]²⁺(aq) Lewis acid: Cu²⁺ (electron pair acceptor) Lewis base: NH₃ (electron pair donor) This is a coordination complex formation where NH₃ donates lone pairs to vacant o

Card 5Nomenclature

Name the compound [Co(en)₂Cl₂]Cl using IUPAC nomenclature rules.

Answer

dichlorido-bis(ethane-1,2-diamine)cobalt(III) chloride Rules applied: 1) Ligands in alphabetical order (chlorido before ethane-1,2-diamine), 2) bis- for complex ligand names, 3) Roman numeral for oxid

Card 6Ligands

What are chelating ligands? Why do they form more stable complexes? Give two examples.

Answer

Chelating ligands = polydentate ligands that bind through 2 or more donor atoms to same metal ion. More stable due to chelate effect (entropy increase when multiple monodentate ligands replaced). Exam

Card 7Magnetic Properties

Calculate the number of unpaired electrons in [CoF₆]³⁻ and predict if it's diamagnetic or paramagnetic.

Answer

Step 1: Co³⁺ configuration = 3d⁶ Step 2: F⁻ is weak field ligand → high spin Step 3: Electron arrangement in octahedral field: t₂g: ↑↓ ↑ ↑ eg: ↑ ↑ Step 4: Unpaired electrons = 4 Step 5: Paramagnetic (

Card 8Crystal Field Theory

Why is [Co(NH₃)₆]³⁺ diamagnetic while [CoF₆]³⁻ is paramagnetic? Explain using crystal field theory.

Answer

Both contain Co³⁺ (3d⁶). NH₃ is strong field ligand causing large Δₒ > P (pairing energy), forcing electrons to pair: t₂g⁶eg⁰ → diamagnetic. F⁻ is weak field ligand with small Δₒ < P, electrons remain

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