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Chabal, Yves Jean; Chabal, Y. J.;
人物简介:
Molecular Orbitals of Transition Metal Complexes书籍相关信息
- ISBN:9780198530930
- 作者:Chabal, Yves Jean; Chabal, Y. J.; / Colin Marsden
- 出版社:: Oxford University Press, USA; 2 edition (May 13, 1976)
- 出版时间:2005-6-2
- 页数:263
- 价格:USD 99.00
- 纸张:暂无纸张
- 装帧:Hardcover
- 开本:暂无开本
- 语言:暂无语言
- 适合人群:Academic researchers, Chemistry students, Inorganic chemistry enthusiasts, Materials scientists, and anyone interested in understanding the electronic structure of transition metal complexes.
- TAG:Chemistry / Inorganic Chemistry / Coordination Compounds / Molecular Orbital Theory / Transition Metal Chemistry
- 豆瓣评分:暂无豆瓣评分
- 更新时间:2025-05-16 22:03:55
内容简介:
This book starts with the most elementary ideas of molecular orbital theory and leads the reader progressively to an understanding of the electronic structure, geometry and, in some cases, reactivity of transition metal complexes. The qualitative orbital approach, based on simple notions such as symmetry, overlap and electronegativity, is the focus of the presentation and a substantial part of the book is associated with the mechanics of the assembly of molecular orbital diagrams. The first chapter recalls the basis for electron counting in transition metal complexes. The main ligand fields (octahedral, square planar, tetrahedral, etc.) are studied in the second chapter (sigma interactions) and the structure of the "d block" is used to trace the relationships between the electronic structure and the geometry of the complexes. The third chapter studies the change in analysis when the ligands have pi-type interactions with the metal. All these ideas are then used in the fourth chapter to study a series of selected applications of varying complexity (structure, reactivity). The fifth chapter deals with the "isolobal analogy" which points out the resemblance between the molecular orbitals of inorganic and organic species and provides a bridge between these two subfields of chemistry. The last chapter is devoted to a presentation of basic Group Theory with applications to some of the complexes studied in the earlier chapters.