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Coordination number

In chemistry, crystallography, and materials science, the coordination number, also called ligancy, of a central atom in a molecule or crystal is the number of atoms, molecules or ions bonded to it. The ion/molecule/atom surrounding the central ion/molecule/atom is called a ligand. This number is determined somewhat differently for molecules than for crystals.

For molecules and polyatomic ions the coordination number of an atom is determined by simply counting the other atoms to which it is bonded (by either single or multiple bonds).[1] For example, [Cr(NH3)2Cl2Br2] has Cr3+ as its central cation, which has a coordination number of 6 and is described as hexacoordinate. The common coordination numbers are 4, 6 and 8.

Molecules, polyatomic ions and coordination complexes Edit

 
Ball-and-stick model of gaseous U(BH4)4, which features 12-coordinate metal centre.[2]
 
[Co(NH3)6]3+, which features 6-coordinate metal centre with octahedral molecular geometry.
 
Chloro(triphenylphosphine)gold(I), which features 2-coordinate metal centre.

In chemistry, coordination number, defined originally in 1893 by Alfred Werner, is the total number of neighbors of a central atom in a molecule or ion.[1][3] The concept is most commonly applied to coordination complexes.

Simple and commonplace cases Edit

The most common coordination number for d-block transition metal complexes is 6. The coordination number does not distinguish the geometry of such complexes, i.e. octahedral vs trigonal prismatic.

For transition metal complexes, coordination numbers range from 2 (e.g., AuI in Ph3PAuCl) to 9 (e.g., ReVII in [ReH9]2−). Metals in the f-block (the lanthanoids and actinoids) can accommodate higher coordination number due to their greater ionic radii and availability of more orbitals for bonding. Coordination numbers of 8 to 12 are commonly observed for f-block elements. For example, with bidentate nitrate ions as ligands, CeIV and ThIV form the 12-coordinate ions [Ce(NO3)6]2− (ceric ammonium nitrate) and [Th(NO3)6]2−. When the surrounding ligands are much smaller than the central atom, even higher coordination numbers may be possible. One computational chemistry study predicted a particularly stable PbHe2+
15
ion composed of a central lead ion coordinated with no fewer than 15 helium atoms.[4] Among the Frank–Kasper phases, the packing of metallic atoms can give coordination numbers of up to 16.[5] At the opposite extreme, steric shielding can give rise to unusually low coordination numbers. An extremely rare instance of a metal adopting a coordination number of 1 occurs in the terphenyl-based arylthallium(I) complex 2,6-Tipp2C6H3Tl, where Tipp is the 2,4,6-triisopropylphenyl group.[6]

Polyhapto ligands Edit

Coordination numbers become ambiguous when dealing with polyhapto ligands. For π-electron ligands such as the cyclopentadienide ion [C5H5], alkenes and the cyclooctatetraenide ion [C8H8]2−, the number of adjacent atoms in the π-electron system that bind to the central atom is termed the hapticity.[7] In ferrocene the hapticity, η, of each cyclopentadienide anion is five, Fe(η5-C5H5)2. Various ways exist for assigning the contribution made to the coordination number of the central iron atom by each cyclopentadienide ligand. The contribution could be assigned as one since there is one ligand, or as five since there are five neighbouring atoms, or as three since there are three electron pairs involved. Normally the count of electron pairs is taken.[8]

Surfaces and reconstruction Edit

The coordination numbers are well defined for atoms in the interior of a crystal lattice: one counts the nearest neighbors in all directions. The number of neighbors of an interior atom is termed the bulk coordination number. For surfaces, the number of neighbors is more limited, so the surface coordination number is smaller than the bulk coordination number. Often the surface coordination number is unknown or variable.[9] The surface coordination number is also dependent on the Miller indices of the surface. In a body-centered cubic (BCC) crystal, the bulk coordination number is 8, whereas, for the (100) surface, the surface coordination number is 4.[10]

Case studies Edit

A common way to determine the coordination number of an atom is by X-ray crystallography. Related techniques include neutron or electron diffraction.[11] The coordination number of an atom can be determined straightforwardly by counting nearest neighbors.

α-Aluminium has a regular cubic close packed structure, fcc, where each aluminium atom has 12 nearest neighbors, 6 in the same plane and 3 above and below and the coordination polyhedron is a cuboctahedron. α-Iron has a body centered cubic structure where each iron atom has 8 nearest neighbors situated at the corners of a cube.

 
A graphite layer, carbon atoms and C–C bonds shown in black.

The two most common allotropes of carbon have different coordination numbers. In diamond, each carbon atom is at the centre of a regular tetrahedron formed by four other carbon atoms, the coordination number is four, as for methane. Graphite is made of two-dimensional layers in which each carbon is covalently bonded to three other carbons; atoms in other layers are further away and are not nearest neighbours, giving a coordination number of 3.[12]

 
bcc structure
 
Ions with coordination number six comprise the highly symmetrical "rock salt structure".

For chemical compounds with regular lattices such as sodium chloride and caesium chloride, a count of the nearest neighbors gives a good picture of the environment of the ions. In sodium chloride each sodium ion has 6 chloride ions as nearest neighbours (at 276 pm) at the corners of an octahedron and each chloride ion has 6 sodium atoms (also at 276 pm) at the corners of an octahedron. In caesium chloride each caesium has 8 chloride ions (at 356 pm) situated at the corners of a cube and each chloride has eight caesium ions (also at 356 pm) at the corners of a cube.

Complications Edit

In some compounds the metal-ligand bonds may not all be at the same distance. For example in PbCl2, the coordination number of Pb2+ could be said to be seven or nine, depending on which chlorides are assigned as ligands. Seven chloride ligands have Pb-Cl distances of 280–309 pm. Two chloride ligands are more distant, with a Pb-Cl distances of 370 pm.[13]

In some cases a different definition of coordination number is used that includes atoms at a greater distance than the nearest neighbours. The very broad definition adopted by the International Union of Crystallography, IUCR, states that the coordination number of an atom in a crystalline solid depends on the chemical bonding model and the way in which the coordination number is calculated.[14][15]

Some metals have irregular structures. For example, zinc has a distorted hexagonal close packed structure. Regular hexagonal close packing of spheres would predict that each atom has 12 nearest neighbours and a triangular orthobicupola (also called an anticuboctahedron or twinned cuboctahedron) coordination polyhedron.[12][16] In zinc there are only 6 nearest neighbours at 266 pm in the same close packed plane with six other, next-nearest neighbours, equidistant, three in each of the close packed planes above and below at 291 pm. It is considered to be reasonable to describe the coordination number as 12 rather than 6.[15] Similar considerations can be applied to the regular body centred cube structure where in addition to the 8 nearest neighbors there 6 more, approximately 15% more distant,[12] and in this case the coordination number is often considered to be 14.

 
NiAs structure

Many chemical compounds have distorted structures. Nickel arsenide, NiAs has a structure where nickel and arsenic atoms are 6-coordinate. Unlike sodium chloride where the chloride ions are cubic close packed, the arsenic anions are hexagonal close packed. The nickel ions are 6-coordinate with a distorted octahedral coordination polyhedron where columns of octahedra share opposite faces. The arsenic ions are not octahedrally coordinated but have a trigonal prismatic coordination polyhedron. A consequence of this arrangement is that the nickel atoms are rather close to each other. Other compounds that share this structure, or a closely related one are some transition metal sulfides such as FeS and CoS, as well as some intermetallics. In cobalt(II) telluride, CoTe, the six tellurium and two cobalt atoms are all equidistant from the central Co atom.[12]

 
Fe2O3 structure

Two other examples of commonly-encountered chemicals are Fe2O3 and TiO2. Fe2O3 has a crystal structure that can be described as having a near close packed array of oxygen atoms with iron atoms filling two thirds of the octahedral holes. However each iron atom has 3 nearest neighbors and 3 others a little further away. The structure is quite complex, the oxygen atoms are coordinated to four iron atoms and the iron atoms in turn share vertices, edges and faces of the distorted octahedra.[12] TiO2 has the rutile structure. The titanium atoms 6-coordinate, 2 atoms at 198.3 pm and 4 at 194.6 pm, in a slightly distorted octahedron. The octahedra around the titanium atoms share edges and vertices to form a 3-D network. The oxide ions are 3-coordinate in a trigonal planar configuration.[17]

Usage in quasicrystal, liquid and other disordered systems Edit

 
First coordination number of Lennard-Jones fluid
 
Second coordination number of Lennard-Jones fluid

The coordination number of systems with disorder cannot be precisely defined.

The first coordination number can be defined using the radial distribution function g(r):[18][19]

 
where r0 is the rightmost position starting from r = 0 whereon g(r) is approximately zero, r1 is the first minimum. Therefore, it is the area under the first peak of g(r).

The second coordination number is defined similarly:

 

Alternative definitions for the coordination number can be found in literature, but in essence the main idea is the same. One of those definition are as follows: Denoting the position of the first peak as rp,

 

The first coordination shell is the spherical shell with radius between r0 and r1 around the central particle under investigation.[20][21]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "coordination number". doi:10.1351/goldbook.C01331
  2. ^ Haaland, Arne; Shorokhov, Dmitry J.; Tutukin, Andrey V.; Volden, Hans Vidar; Swang, Ole; McGrady, G. Sean; Kaltsoyannis, Nikolas; Downs, Anthony J.; Tang, Christina Y.; Turner, John F. C. (2002). "Molecular Structures of Two Metal Tetrakis(tetrahydroborates), Zr(BH4)4 and U(BH4)4: Equilibrium Conformations and Barriers to Internal Rotation of the Triply Bridging BH4 Groups". Inorganic Chemistry. 41 (25): 6646–6655. doi:10.1021/ic020357z. PMID 12470059.
  3. ^ De, A.K. (2003). A Text Book of Inorganic Chemistry. New Age International Publishers. p. 88. ISBN 978-8122413847.
  4. ^ Hermann, Andreas; Lein, Matthias; Schwerdtfeger, Peter (2007). "The Search for the Species with the Highest Coordination Number". Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 46 (14): 2444–7. doi:10.1002/anie.200604148. PMID 17315141.
  5. ^ Sinha, Ashok K. (1972). "Topologically close-packed structures of transition metal alloys". Progress in Materials Science. Elsevier BV. 15 (2): 81–185. doi:10.1016/0079-6425(72)90002-3. ISSN 0079-6425.
  6. ^ Niemeyer, Mark; Power, Philip P. (1998-05-18). "Synthesis and Solid-State Structure of 2,6-Trip2C6H3Tl (Trip=2,4,6-iPr3C6H2): A Monomeric Arylthallium(I) Compound with a Singly Coordinated Thallium Atom". Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 37 (9): 1277–1279. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1521-3773(19980518)37:9<1277::AID-ANIE1277>3.0.CO;2-1. ISSN 1521-3773. PMID 29711226.
  7. ^ IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "hapticity". doi:10.1351/goldbook.H01881
  8. ^ Crabtree, Robert H. (2009). The Organometallic Chemistry of the Transition Metals. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9780470257623.
  9. ^ De Graef, Marc; McHenry, Michael E. (2007). Structure of Materials: An Introduction to Crystallography, Diffraction and Symmetry (PDF). Cambridge University Press. p. 515. ISBN 978-0-521-65151-6. Retrieved 15 March 2019.
  10. ^ "Closest Packed Structures". Chemistry LibreTexts. 2 October 2013. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  11. ^ Massa, Werner (1999). Crystal Structure Determination (English ed.). Springer. pp. 67–92.
  12. ^ a b c d e Wells, A.F. (1984). Structural Inorganic Chemistry (5th ed.). Oxford Science Publications. ISBN 978-0198553700.
  13. ^ Wells A. F. (1984) Structural Inorganic Chemistry 5th edition Oxford Science Publications ISBN 0-19-855370-6
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-06-13. Retrieved 2014-11-09.
  15. ^ a b Mittemeijer, Eric J. (2010). Fundamentals of Materials Science: The Microstructure–Property Relationship using metals as model systems. Springer. ISBN 9783642105005.
  16. ^ Piróth, A.; Sólyom, Jenö (2007). Fundamentals of the Physics of Solids: Volume 1: Structure and Dynamics. Springer. p. 227. ISBN 9783540726005.
  17. ^ Diebold, Ulrike (2003). "The surface science of titanium dioxide". Surface Science Reports. 48 (5–8): 53–229. Bibcode:2003SurSR..48...53D. doi:10.1016/S0167-5729(02)00100-0. ISSN 0167-5729.
  18. ^ Waseda, Y. (1980). The Structure of Non-crystalline Materials: Liquids and Amorphous Solids. Advanced Book Program. McGraw-Hill International Book Company. ISBN 978-0-07-068426-3. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  19. ^ Vahvaselkä, K. S.; Mangs, J. M. (1988). "X-ray diffraction study of liquid sulfur". Physica Scripta. 38 (5): 737. Bibcode:1988PhyS...38..737V. doi:10.1088/0031-8949/38/5/017. S2CID 250801367.
  20. ^ Toofan, Jahansooz (1994). "A Simple Expression between Critical Radius Ratio and Coordination Number". Journal of Chemical Education. 71 (2): 147. Bibcode:1994JChEd..71..147T. doi:10.1021/ed071p147. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  21. ^ "Errata". Journal of Chemical Education. 71 (9): 749. 1994. Bibcode:1994JChEd..71..749.. doi:10.1021/ed071p749.

External links Edit

  • Meteorite Book-Glossary C
  • A website on coordination numbers

coordination, number, chemistry, crystallography, materials, science, coordination, number, also, called, ligancy, central, atom, molecule, crystal, number, atoms, molecules, ions, bonded, molecule, atom, surrounding, central, molecule, atom, called, ligand, t. In chemistry crystallography and materials science the coordination number also called ligancy of a central atom in a molecule or crystal is the number of atoms molecules or ions bonded to it The ion molecule atom surrounding the central ion molecule atom is called a ligand This number is determined somewhat differently for molecules than for crystals For molecules and polyatomic ions the coordination number of an atom is determined by simply counting the other atoms to which it is bonded by either single or multiple bonds 1 For example Cr NH3 2Cl2Br2 has Cr3 as its central cation which has a coordination number of 6 and is described as hexacoordinate The common coordination numbers are 4 6 and 8 Contents 1 Molecules polyatomic ions and coordination complexes 2 Simple and commonplace cases 2 1 Polyhapto ligands 3 Surfaces and reconstruction 4 Case studies 4 1 Complications 5 Usage in quasicrystal liquid and other disordered systems 6 References 7 External linksMolecules polyatomic ions and coordination complexes Edit nbsp Ball and stick model of gaseous U BH4 4 which features 12 coordinate metal centre 2 nbsp Co NH3 6 3 which features 6 coordinate metal centre with octahedral molecular geometry nbsp Chloro triphenylphosphine gold I which features 2 coordinate metal centre In chemistry coordination number defined originally in 1893 by Alfred Werner is the total number of neighbors of a central atom in a molecule or ion 1 3 The concept is most commonly applied to coordination complexes Simple and commonplace cases EditThe most common coordination number for d block transition metal complexes is 6 The coordination number does not distinguish the geometry of such complexes i e octahedral vs trigonal prismatic For transition metal complexes coordination numbers range from 2 e g AuI in Ph3PAuCl to 9 e g ReVII in ReH9 2 Metals in the f block the lanthanoids and actinoids can accommodate higher coordination number due to their greater ionic radii and availability of more orbitals for bonding Coordination numbers of 8 to 12 are commonly observed for f block elements For example with bidentate nitrate ions as ligands CeIV and ThIV form the 12 coordinate ions Ce NO3 6 2 ceric ammonium nitrate and Th NO3 6 2 When the surrounding ligands are much smaller than the central atom even higher coordination numbers may be possible One computational chemistry study predicted a particularly stable PbHe2 15 ion composed of a central lead ion coordinated with no fewer than 15 helium atoms 4 Among the Frank Kasper phases the packing of metallic atoms can give coordination numbers of up to 16 5 At the opposite extreme steric shielding can give rise to unusually low coordination numbers An extremely rare instance of a metal adopting a coordination number of 1 occurs in the terphenyl based arylthallium I complex 2 6 Tipp2C6H3Tl where Tipp is the 2 4 6 triisopropylphenyl group 6 Polyhapto ligands Edit Coordination numbers become ambiguous when dealing with polyhapto ligands For p electron ligands such as the cyclopentadienide ion C5H5 alkenes and the cyclooctatetraenide ion C8H8 2 the number of adjacent atoms in the p electron system that bind to the central atom is termed the hapticity 7 In ferrocene the hapticity h of each cyclopentadienide anion is five Fe h5 C5H5 2 Various ways exist for assigning the contribution made to the coordination number of the central iron atom by each cyclopentadienide ligand The contribution could be assigned as one since there is one ligand or as five since there are five neighbouring atoms or as three since there are three electron pairs involved Normally the count of electron pairs is taken 8 Surfaces and reconstruction EditThe coordination numbers are well defined for atoms in the interior of a crystal lattice one counts the nearest neighbors in all directions The number of neighbors of an interior atom is termed the bulk coordination number For surfaces the number of neighbors is more limited so the surface coordination number is smaller than the bulk coordination number Often the surface coordination number is unknown or variable 9 The surface coordination number is also dependent on the Miller indices of the surface In a body centered cubic BCC crystal the bulk coordination number is 8 whereas for the 100 surface the surface coordination number is 4 10 Case studies EditA common way to determine the coordination number of an atom is by X ray crystallography Related techniques include neutron or electron diffraction 11 The coordination number of an atom can be determined straightforwardly by counting nearest neighbors a Aluminium has a regular cubic close packed structure fcc where each aluminium atom has 12 nearest neighbors 6 in the same plane and 3 above and below and the coordination polyhedron is a cuboctahedron a Iron has a body centered cubic structure where each iron atom has 8 nearest neighbors situated at the corners of a cube nbsp A graphite layer carbon atoms and C C bonds shown in black The two most common allotropes of carbon have different coordination numbers In diamond each carbon atom is at the centre of a regular tetrahedron formed by four other carbon atoms the coordination number is four as for methane Graphite is made of two dimensional layers in which each carbon is covalently bonded to three other carbons atoms in other layers are further away and are not nearest neighbours giving a coordination number of 3 12 nbsp bcc structure nbsp Ions with coordination number six comprise the highly symmetrical rock salt structure For chemical compounds with regular lattices such as sodium chloride and caesium chloride a count of the nearest neighbors gives a good picture of the environment of the ions In sodium chloride each sodium ion has 6 chloride ions as nearest neighbours at 276 pm at the corners of an octahedron and each chloride ion has 6 sodium atoms also at 276 pm at the corners of an octahedron In caesium chloride each caesium has 8 chloride ions at 356 pm situated at the corners of a cube and each chloride has eight caesium ions also at 356 pm at the corners of a cube Complications Edit In some compounds the metal ligand bonds may not all be at the same distance For example in PbCl2 the coordination number of Pb2 could be said to be seven or nine depending on which chlorides are assigned as ligands Seven chloride ligands have Pb Cl distances of 280 309 pm Two chloride ligands are more distant with a Pb Cl distances of 370 pm 13 In some cases a different definition of coordination number is used that includes atoms at a greater distance than the nearest neighbours The very broad definition adopted by the International Union of Crystallography IUCR states that the coordination number of an atom in a crystalline solid depends on the chemical bonding model and the way in which the coordination number is calculated 14 15 Some metals have irregular structures For example zinc has a distorted hexagonal close packed structure Regular hexagonal close packing of spheres would predict that each atom has 12 nearest neighbours and a triangular orthobicupola also called an anticuboctahedron or twinned cuboctahedron coordination polyhedron 12 16 In zinc there are only 6 nearest neighbours at 266 pm in the same close packed plane with six other next nearest neighbours equidistant three in each of the close packed planes above and below at 291 pm It is considered to be reasonable to describe the coordination number as 12 rather than 6 15 Similar considerations can be applied to the regular body centred cube structure where in addition to the 8 nearest neighbors there 6 more approximately 15 more distant 12 and in this case the coordination number is often considered to be 14 nbsp NiAs structureMany chemical compounds have distorted structures Nickel arsenide NiAs has a structure where nickel and arsenic atoms are 6 coordinate Unlike sodium chloride where the chloride ions are cubic close packed the arsenic anions are hexagonal close packed The nickel ions are 6 coordinate with a distorted octahedral coordination polyhedron where columns of octahedra share opposite faces The arsenic ions are not octahedrally coordinated but have a trigonal prismatic coordination polyhedron A consequence of this arrangement is that the nickel atoms are rather close to each other Other compounds that share this structure or a closely related one are some transition metal sulfides such as FeS and CoS as well as some intermetallics In cobalt II telluride CoTe the six tellurium and two cobalt atoms are all equidistant from the central Co atom 12 nbsp Fe2O3 structureTwo other examples of commonly encountered chemicals are Fe2O3 and TiO2 Fe2O3 has a crystal structure that can be described as having a near close packed array of oxygen atoms with iron atoms filling two thirds of the octahedral holes However each iron atom has 3 nearest neighbors and 3 others a little further away The structure is quite complex the oxygen atoms are coordinated to four iron atoms and the iron atoms in turn share vertices edges and faces of the distorted octahedra 12 TiO2 has the rutile structure The titanium atoms 6 coordinate 2 atoms at 198 3 pm and 4 at 194 6 pm in a slightly distorted octahedron The octahedra around the titanium atoms share edges and vertices to form a 3 D network The oxide ions are 3 coordinate in a trigonal planar configuration 17 Usage in quasicrystal liquid and other disordered systems Edit nbsp First coordination number of Lennard Jones fluid nbsp Second coordination number of Lennard Jones fluidThe coordination number of systems with disorder cannot be precisely defined The first coordination number can be defined using the radial distribution function g r 18 19 n 1 4 p r 0 r 1 r 2 g r r d r displaystyle n 1 4 pi int r 0 r 1 r 2 g r rho dr nbsp where r0 is the rightmost position starting from r 0 whereon g r is approximately zero r1 is the first minimum Therefore it is the area under the first peak of g r The second coordination number is defined similarly n 2 4 p r 1 r 2 r 2 g r r d r displaystyle n 2 4 pi int r 1 r 2 r 2 g r rho dr nbsp Alternative definitions for the coordination number can be found in literature but in essence the main idea is the same One of those definition are as follows Denoting the position of the first peak as rp n 1 8 p r 0 r p r 2 g r r d r displaystyle n 1 8 pi int r 0 r p r 2 g r rho dr nbsp The first coordination shell is the spherical shell with radius between r0 and r1 around the central particle under investigation 20 21 References Edit a b IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 coordination number doi 10 1351 goldbook C01331 Haaland Arne Shorokhov Dmitry J Tutukin Andrey V Volden Hans Vidar Swang Ole McGrady G Sean Kaltsoyannis Nikolas Downs Anthony J Tang Christina Y Turner John F C 2002 Molecular Structures of Two Metal Tetrakis tetrahydroborates Zr BH4 4 and U BH4 4 Equilibrium Conformations and Barriers to Internal Rotation of the Triply Bridging BH4 Groups Inorganic Chemistry 41 25 6646 6655 doi 10 1021 ic020357z PMID 12470059 De A K 2003 A Text Book of Inorganic Chemistry New Age International Publishers p 88 ISBN 978 8122413847 Hermann Andreas Lein Matthias Schwerdtfeger Peter 2007 The Search for the Species with the Highest Coordination Number Angewandte Chemie International Edition 46 14 2444 7 doi 10 1002 anie 200604148 PMID 17315141 Sinha Ashok K 1972 Topologically close packed structures of transition metal alloys Progress in Materials Science Elsevier BV 15 2 81 185 doi 10 1016 0079 6425 72 90002 3 ISSN 0079 6425 Niemeyer Mark Power Philip P 1998 05 18 Synthesis and Solid State Structure of 2 6 Trip2C6H3Tl Trip 2 4 6 iPr3C6H2 A Monomeric Arylthallium I Compound with a Singly Coordinated Thallium Atom Angewandte Chemie International Edition 37 9 1277 1279 doi 10 1002 SICI 1521 3773 19980518 37 9 lt 1277 AID ANIE1277 gt 3 0 CO 2 1 ISSN 1521 3773 PMID 29711226 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 hapticity doi 10 1351 goldbook H01881 Crabtree Robert H 2009 The Organometallic Chemistry of the Transition Metals John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9780470257623 De Graef Marc McHenry Michael E 2007 Structure of Materials An Introduction to Crystallography Diffraction and Symmetry PDF Cambridge University Press p 515 ISBN 978 0 521 65151 6 Retrieved 15 March 2019 Closest Packed Structures Chemistry LibreTexts 2 October 2013 Retrieved 28 July 2020 Massa Werner 1999 Crystal Structure Determination English ed Springer pp 67 92 a b c d e Wells A F 1984 Structural Inorganic Chemistry 5th ed Oxford Science Publications ISBN 978 0198553700 Wells A F 1984 Structural Inorganic Chemistry 5th edition Oxford Science Publications ISBN 0 19 855370 6 II Coordination of the atoms Archived from the original on 2012 06 13 Retrieved 2014 11 09 a b Mittemeijer Eric J 2010 Fundamentals of Materials Science The Microstructure Property Relationship using metals as model systems Springer ISBN 9783642105005 Piroth A Solyom Jeno 2007 Fundamentals of the Physics of Solids Volume 1 Structure and Dynamics Springer p 227 ISBN 9783540726005 Diebold Ulrike 2003 The surface science of titanium dioxide Surface Science Reports 48 5 8 53 229 Bibcode 2003SurSR 48 53D doi 10 1016 S0167 5729 02 00100 0 ISSN 0167 5729 Waseda Y 1980 The Structure of Non crystalline Materials Liquids and Amorphous Solids Advanced Book Program McGraw Hill International Book Company ISBN 978 0 07 068426 3 Retrieved 16 October 2020 Vahvaselka K S Mangs J M 1988 X ray diffraction study of liquid sulfur Physica Scripta 38 5 737 Bibcode 1988PhyS 38 737V doi 10 1088 0031 8949 38 5 017 S2CID 250801367 Toofan Jahansooz 1994 A Simple Expression between Critical Radius Ratio and Coordination Number Journal of Chemical Education 71 2 147 Bibcode 1994JChEd 71 147T doi 10 1021 ed071p147 Retrieved 3 January 2022 Errata Journal of Chemical Education 71 9 749 1994 Bibcode 1994JChEd 71 749 doi 10 1021 ed071p749 External links EditMeteorite Book Glossary C A website on coordination numbers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coordination number amp oldid 1163918328, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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