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Ligand

In coordination chemistry, a ligand[a] is an ion or molecule (functional group) that binds to a central metal atom to form a coordination complex. The bonding with the metal generally involves formal donation of one or more of the ligand's electron pairs, often through Lewis bases.[1] The nature of metal–ligand bonding can range from covalent to ionic. Furthermore, the metal–ligand bond order can range from one to three. Ligands are viewed as Lewis bases, although rare cases are known to involve Lewis acidic "ligands".[2][3]

Cobalt complex HCo(CO)4 with five ligands

Metals and metalloids are bound to ligands in almost all circumstances, although gaseous "naked" metal ions can be generated in a high vacuum. Ligands in a complex dictate the reactivity of the central atom, including ligand substitution rates, the reactivity of the ligands themselves, and redox. Ligand selection requires critical consideration in many practical areas, including bioinorganic and medicinal chemistry, homogeneous catalysis, and environmental chemistry.

Ligands are classified in many ways, including: charge, size (bulk), the identity of the coordinating atom(s), and the number of electrons donated to the metal (denticity or hapticity). The size of a ligand is indicated by its cone angle.

History

The composition of coordination complexes have been known since the early 1800s, such as Prussian blue and copper vitriol. The key breakthrough occurred when Alfred Werner reconciled formulas and isomers. He showed, among other things, that the formulas of many cobalt(III) and chromium(III) compounds can be understood if the metal has six ligands in an octahedral geometry. The first to use the term "ligand" were Alfred Werner and Carl Somiesky, in relation to silicon chemistry. The theory allows one to understand the difference between coordinated and ionic chloride in the cobalt ammine chlorides and to explain many of the previously inexplicable isomers. He resolved the first coordination complex called hexol into optical isomers, overthrowing the theory that chirality was necessarily associated with carbon compounds.[4][5]

Strong field and weak field ligands

In general, ligands are viewed as electron donors and the metals as electron acceptors, i.e., respectively, Lewis bases and Lewis acids. This description has been semi-quantified in many ways, e.g. ECW model. Bonding is often described using the formalisms of molecular orbital theory.[6][7]

Ligands and metal ions can be ordered in many ways; one ranking system focuses on ligand 'hardness' (see also hard/soft acid/base theory). Metal ions preferentially bind certain ligands. In general, 'hard' metal ions prefer weak field ligands, whereas 'soft' metal ions prefer strong field ligands. According to the molecular orbital theory, the HOMO (Highest Occupied Molecular Orbital) of the ligand should have an energy that overlaps with the LUMO (Lowest Unoccupied Molecular Orbital) of the metal preferential. Metal ions bound to strong-field ligands follow the Aufbau principle, whereas complexes bound to weak-field ligands follow Hund's rule.

Binding of the metal with the ligands results in a set of molecular orbitals, where the metal can be identified with a new HOMO and LUMO (the orbitals defining the properties and reactivity of the resulting complex) and a certain ordering of the 5 d-orbitals (which may be filled, or partially filled with electrons). In an octahedral environment, the 5 otherwise degenerate d-orbitals split in sets of 3 and 2 orbitals (for a more in-depth explanation, see crystal field theory):

  • 3 orbitals of low energy: dxy, dxz and dyz and
  • 2 orbitals of high energy: dz2 and dx2y2.

The energy difference between these 2 sets of d-orbitals is called the splitting parameter, Δo. The magnitude of Δo is determined by the field-strength of the ligand: strong field ligands, by definition, increase Δo more than weak field ligands. Ligands can now be sorted according to the magnitude of Δo (see the table below). This ordering of ligands is almost invariable for all metal ions and is called spectrochemical series.

For complexes with a tetrahedral surrounding, the d-orbitals again split into two sets, but this time in reverse order:

  • 2 orbitals of low energy: dz2 and dx2y2 and
  • 3 orbitals of high energy: dxy, dxz and dyz.

The energy difference between these 2 sets of d-orbitals is now called Δt. The magnitude of Δt is smaller than for Δo, because in a tetrahedral complex only 4 ligands influence the d-orbitals, whereas in an octahedral complex the d-orbitals are influenced by 6 ligands. When the coordination number is neither octahedral nor tetrahedral, the splitting becomes correspondingly more complex. For the purposes of ranking ligands, however, the properties of the octahedral complexes and the resulting Δo has been of primary interest.

The arrangement of the d-orbitals on the central atom (as determined by the 'strength' of the ligand), has a strong effect on virtually all the properties of the resulting complexes. E.g., the energy differences in the d-orbitals has a strong effect in the optical absorption spectra of metal complexes. It turns out that valence electrons occupying orbitals with significant 3 d-orbital character absorb in the 400–800 nm region of the spectrum (UV–visible range). The absorption of light (what we perceive as the color) by these electrons (that is, excitation of electrons from one orbital to another orbital under influence of light) can be correlated to the ground state of the metal complex, which reflects the bonding properties of the ligands. The relative change in (relative) energy of the d-orbitals as a function of the field-strength of the ligands is described in Tanabe–Sugano diagrams.

In cases where the ligand has low energy LUMO, such orbitals also participate in the bonding. The metal–ligand bond can be further stabilised by a formal donation of electron density back to the ligand in a process known as back-bonding. In this case a filled, central-atom-based orbital donates density into the LUMO of the (coordinated) ligand. Carbon monoxide is the preeminent example a ligand that engages metals via back-donation. Complementarily, ligands with low-energy filled orbitals of pi-symmetry can serve as pi-donor.

 
Metal–EDTA complex, wherein the aminocarboxylate is a hexadentate (chelating) ligand
 
Cobalt(III) complex containing six ammonia ligands, which are monodentate. The chloride is not a ligand.

Classification of ligands as L and X

Especially in the area of organometallic chemistry, ligands are classified as L and X (or combinations of the two). The classification scheme – the "CBC Method" for Covalent Bond Classification – was popularized by M.L.H. Green and "is based on the notion that there are three basic types [of ligands]... represented by the symbols L, X, and Z, which correspond respectively to 2-electron, 1-electron and 0-electron neutral ligands."[8][9] Another type of ligand worthy of consideration is the LX ligand which as expected from the used conventional representation will donate three electrons if NVE (Number of Valence Electrons) required. Example is alkoxy ligands( which is regularly known as X ligand too). L ligands are derived from charge-neutral precursors and are represented by amines, phosphines, CO, N2, and alkenes. X ligands typically are derived from anionic precursors such as chloride but includes ligands where salts of anion do not really exist such as hydride and alkyl. Thus, the complex IrCl(CO)(PPh3)2 is classified as an MXL3 complex, since CO and the two PPh3 ligands are classified as Ls. The oxidative addition of H2 to IrCl(CO)(PPh3)2 gives an 18e ML3X3 product, IrClH2(CO)(PPh3)2. EDTA4− is classified as an L2X4 ligand, as it features four anions and two neutral donor sites. Cp is classified as an L2X ligand.[10]

Polydentate and polyhapto ligand motifs and nomenclature

Denticity

Denticity (represented by κ) refers to the number of times a ligand bonds to a metal through noncontiguous donor sites. Many ligands are capable of binding metal ions through multiple sites, usually because the ligands have lone pairs on more than one atom. Ligands that bind via more than one atom are often termed chelating. A ligand that binds through two sites is classified as bidentate, and three sites as tridentate. The "bite angle" refers to the angle between the two bonds of a bidentate chelate. Chelating ligands are commonly formed by linking donor groups via organic linkers. A classic bidentate ligand is ethylenediamine, which is derived by the linking of two ammonia groups with an ethylene (−CH2CH2−) linker. A classic example of a polydentate ligand is the hexadentate chelating agent EDTA, which is able to bond through six sites, completely surrounding some metals. The number of times a polydentate ligand binds to a metal centre is symbolized by "κn", where n indicates the number of sites by which a ligand attaches to a metal. EDTA4−, when it is hexidentate, binds as a κ6-ligand, the amines and the carboxylate oxygen atoms are not contiguous. In practice, the n value of a ligand is not indicated explicitly but rather assumed. The binding affinity of a chelating system depends on the chelating angle or bite angle.

Complexes of polydentate ligands are called chelate complexes. They tend to be more stable than complexes derived from monodentate ligands. This enhanced stability, called the chelate effect, is usually attributed to effects of entropy, which favors the displacement of many ligands by one polydentate ligand.

Related to the chelate effect is the macrocyclic effect. A macrocyclic ligand is any large ligand that at least partially surrounds the central atom and bonds to it, leaving the central atom at the centre of a large ring. The more rigid and the higher its denticity, the more inert will be the macrocyclic complex. Heme is an example, in which the iron atom is at the centre of a porphyrin macrocycle, bound to four nitrogen atoms of the tetrapyrrole macrocycle. The very stable dimethylglyoximate complex of nickel is a synthetic macrocycle derived from dimethylglyoxime.

Hapticity

Hapticity (represented by η) refers to the number of contiguous atoms that comprise a donor site and attach to a metal center. Butadiene forms both η2 and η4 complexes depending on the number of carbon atoms that are bonded to the metal.[10]

Ligand motifs

Trans-spanning ligands

Trans-spanning ligands are bidentate ligands that can span coordination positions on opposite sides of a coordination complex.[11]

Ambidentate ligand

In contrast to polydentate ligands, ambidentate ligands can attach to the central atom in either one of two (or more) places, but not both. A example is thiocyanate, SCN, which can attach at either the sulfur atom or the nitrogen atom. Such compounds give rise to linkage isomerism. Polyfunctional ligands, see especially proteins, can bond to a metal center through different ligand atoms to form various isomers.[clarification needed]

Bridging ligand

A bridging ligand links two or more metal centers. Virtually all inorganic solids with simple formulas are coordination polymers, consisting of metal ion centres linked by bridging ligands. This group of materials includes all anhydrous binary metal ion halides and pseudohalides. Bridging ligands also persist in solution. Polyatomic ligands such as carbonate are ambidentate and thus are found to often bind to two or three metals simultaneously. Atoms that bridge metals are sometimes indicated with the prefix "μ". Most inorganic solids are polymers by virtue of the presence of multiple bridging ligands. Bridging ligands, capable of coordinating multiple metal ions, have been attracting considerable interest because of their potential use as building blocks for the fabrication of functional multimetallic assemblies.[12]

Binucleating ligand

Binucleating ligands bind two metal ions.[13] Usually binucleating ligands feature bridging ligands, such as phenoxide, pyrazolate, or pyrazine, as well as other donor groups that bind to only one of the two metal ions.

Metal–ligand multiple bond

Some ligands can bond to a metal center through the same atom but with a different number of lone pairs. The bond order of the metal ligand bond can be in part distinguished through the metal ligand bond angle (M−X−R). This bond angle is often referred to as being linear or bent with further discussion concerning the degree to which the angle is bent. For example, an imido ligand in the ionic form has three lone pairs. One lone pair is used as a sigma X donor, the other two lone pairs are available as L-type pi donors. If both lone pairs are used in pi bonds then the M−N−R geometry is linear. However, if one or both these lone pairs is nonbonding then the M−N−R bond is bent and the extent of the bend speaks to how much pi bonding there may be. η1-Nitric oxide can coordinate to a metal center in linear or bent manner.

Spectator ligand

A spectator ligand is a tightly coordinating polydentate ligand that does not participate in chemical reactions but removes active sites on a metal. Spectator ligands influence the reactivity of the metal center to which they are bound.

Bulky ligands

Bulky ligands are used to control the steric properties of a metal center. They are used for many reasons, both practical and academic. On the practical side, they influence the selectivity of metal catalysts, e.g., in hydroformylation. Of academic interest, bulky ligands stabilize unusual coordination sites, e.g., reactive coligands or low coordination numbers. Often bulky ligands are employed to simulate the steric protection afforded by proteins to metal-containing active sites. Of course excessive steric bulk can prevent the coordination of certain ligands.

 
The N-heterocyclic carbene ligand called IMes is a bulky ligand by virtue of the pair of mesityl groups.

Chiral ligands

Chiral ligands are useful for inducing asymmetry within the coordination sphere. Often the ligand is employed as an optically pure group. In some cases, such as secondary amines, the asymmetry arises upon coordination. Chiral ligands are used in homogeneous catalysis, such as asymmetric hydrogenation.

Hemilabile ligands

Hemilabile ligands contain at least two electronically different coordinating groups and form complexes where one of these is easily displaced from the metal center while the other remains firmly bound, a behaviour which has been found to increase the reactivity of catalysts when compared to the use of more traditional ligands.

Non-innocent ligand

Non-innocent ligands bond with metals in such a manner that the distribution of electron density between the metal center and ligand is unclear. Describing the bonding of non-innocent ligands often involves writing multiple resonance forms that have partial contributions to the overall state.

Common ligands

Virtually every molecule and every ion can serve as a ligand for (or "coordinate to") metals. Monodentate ligands include virtually all anions and all simple Lewis bases. Thus, the halides and pseudohalides are important anionic ligands whereas ammonia, carbon monoxide, and water are particularly common charge-neutral ligands. Simple organic species are also very common, be they anionic (RO and RCO
2
) or neutral (R2O, R2S, R3−xNHx, and R3P). The steric properties of some ligands are evaluated in terms of their cone angles.

Beyond the classical Lewis bases and anions, all unsaturated molecules are also ligands, utilizing their pi electrons in forming the coordinate bond. Also, metals can bind to the σ bonds in for example silanes, hydrocarbons, and dihydrogen (see also: Agostic interaction).

In complexes of non-innocent ligands, the ligand is bonded to metals via conventional bonds, but the ligand is also redox-active.

Examples of common ligands (by field strength)

In the following table the ligands are sorted by field strength[citation needed] (weak field ligands first):

Ligand formula (bonding atom(s) in bold) Charge Most common denticity Remark(s)
Iodide (iodo) I monoanionic monodentate
Bromide (bromido) Br monoanionic monodentate
Sulfide (thio or less commonly "bridging thiolate") S2− dianionic monodentate (M=S), or bidentate bridging (M−S−M')
Thiocyanate (S-thiocyanato) S−CN monoanionic monodentate ambidentate (see also isothiocyanate, below)
Chloride (chlorido) Cl monoanionic monodentate also found bridging
Nitrate (nitrato) ONO
2
monoanionic monodentate
Azide (azido) NN
2
monoanionic monodentate Very Toxic
Fluoride (fluoro) F monoanionic monodentate
Hydroxide (hydroxido) O−H monoanionic monodentate often found as a bridging ligand
Oxalate (oxalato) [O−CO−CO−O]2− dianionic bidentate
Water (aqua) O−H2 neutral monodentate
Nitrite (nitrito) O−N−O monoanionic monodentate ambidentate (see also nitro)
Isothiocyanate (isothiocyanato) N=C=S monoanionic monodentate ambidentate (see also thiocyanate, above)
Acetonitrile (acetonitrilo) CH3CN neutral monodentate
Pyridine (py) C5H5N neutral monodentate
Ammonia (ammine or less commonly "ammino") NH3 neutral monodentate
Ethylenediamine (en) NH2−CH2−CH2NH2 neutral bidentate
2,2'-Bipyridine (bipy) NC5H4−C5H4N neutral bidentate easily reduced to its (radical) anion or even to its dianion
1,10-Phenanthroline (phen) C12H8N2 neutral bidentate
Nitrite (nitro) NO
2
monoanionic monodentate ambidentate (see also nitrito)
Triphenylphosphine P−(C6H5)3 neutral monodentate
Cyanide (cyano) C≡N
N≡C
monoanionic monodentate can bridge between metals (both metals bound to C, or one to C and one to N)
Carbon monoxide (carbonyl) CO, others neutral monodentate can bridge between metals (both metals bound to C)

The entries in the table are sorted by field strength, binding through the stated atom (i.e. as a terminal ligand). The 'strength' of the ligand changes when the ligand binds in an alternative binding mode (e.g., when it bridges between metals) or when the conformation of the ligand gets distorted (e.g., a linear ligand that is forced through steric interactions to bind in a nonlinear fashion).

Other generally encountered ligands (alphabetical)

In this table other common ligands are listed in alphabetical order.

Ligand Formula (bonding atom(s) in bold) Charge Most common denticity Remark(s)
Acetylacetonate (acac) CH3−CO−CH2−CO−CH3 monoanionic bidentate In general bidentate, bound through both oxygens, but sometimes bound through the central carbon only,
see also analogous ketimine analogues
Alkenes R2C=CR2 neutral compounds with a C−C double bond
Aminopolycarboxylic acids (APCAs)        
BAPTA (1,2-bis(o-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid)        
Benzene C6H6 neutral and other arenes
1,2-Bis(diphenylphosphino)ethane (dppe) (C6H5)2P−C2H4P(C6H5)2 neutral bidentate
1,1-Bis(diphenylphosphino)methane (dppm) (C6H5)2P−CH2P(C6H5)2 neutral Can bond to two metal atoms at once, forming dimers
Corroles tetradentate
Crown ethers neutral primarily for alkali and alkaline earth metal cations
2,2,2-cryptand hexadentate primarily for alkali and alkaline earth metal cations
Cryptates neutral
Cyclopentadienyl (Cp) C
5
H
5
monoanionic Although monoanionic, by the nature of its occupied molecular orbitals, it is capable of acting as a tridentate ligand.
Diethylenetriamine (dien) C4H13N3 neutral tridentate related to TACN, but not constrained to facial complexation
Dimethylglyoximate (dmgH) monoanionic
1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid (DOTA)        
Diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA) (pentetic acid)        
Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) (edta4−) (OOC−CH2)2N−C2H4N(CH2-COO)2 tetraanionic hexadentate
Ethylenediaminetriacetate OOC−CH2NH−C2H4N(CH2-COO)2 trianionic pentadentate
Ethyleneglycolbis(oxyethylenenitrilo)tetraacetate (egta4−) (OOC−CH2)2N−C2H4O−C2H4O−C2H4N(CH2−COO)2 tetraanionic octodentate
Fura-2        
Glycinate (glycinato) NH2CH2COO monoanionic bidentate other α-amino acid anions are comparable (but chiral)
Heme dianionic tetradentate macrocyclic ligand
Iminodiacetic acid (IDA)     tridentate Used extensively to make radiotracers for scintigraphy by complexing the metastable radionuclide technetium-99m. For example, in cholescintigraphy, HIDA, BrIDA, PIPIDA, and DISIDA are used
Nicotianamine       Ubiquitous in higher plants
Nitrosyl NO+ cationic bent (1e) and linear (3e) bonding mode
Nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA)        
Oxo O2− dianion monodentate sometimes bridging
Pyrazine N2C4H4 neutral ditopic sometimes bridging
Scorpionate ligand tridentate
Sulfite OSO2−
2

SO2−
3
monoanionic monodentate ambidentate
2,2';6',2″-Terpyridine (terpy) NC5H4−C5H3N−C5H4N neutral tridentate meridional bonding only
Triazacyclononane (tacn) (C2H4)3(NR)3 neutral tridentate macrocyclic ligand
see also the N,N′,N″-trimethylated analogue
Tricyclohexylphosphine P(C6H11)3 or PCy3 neutral monodentate
Triethylenetetramine (trien) C6H18N4 neutral tetradentate
Trimethylphosphine P(CH3)3 neutral monodentate
Tris(o-tolyl)phosphine P(o-tolyl)3 neutral monodentate
Tris(2-aminoethyl)amine (tren) (NH2CH2CH2)3N neutral tetradentate
Tris(2-diphenylphosphineethyl)amine (np3) neutral tetradentate
Tropylium C
7
H+
7
cationic
Carbon dioxide CO2, others neutral see metal carbon dioxide complex
Phosphorus trifluoride (trifluorophosphorus) PF3 neutral

Ligand exchange

A ligand exchange (also ligand substitution) is a type of chemical reaction in which a ligand in a compound is replaced by another. One type of pathway for substitution is the ligand dependent pathway. In organometallic chemistry this can take place via associative substitution or by dissociative substitution.[14]

Ligand–protein binding database

BioLiP[15] is a comprehensive ligand–protein interaction database, with the 3D structure of the ligand–protein interactions taken from the Protein Data Bank. MANORAA is a webserver for analyzing conserved and differential molecular interaction of the ligand in complex with protein structure homologs from the Protein Data Bank. It provides the linkage to protein targets such as its location in the biochemical pathways, SNPs and protein/RNA baseline expression in target organ.[16]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ The word ligand comes from Latin ligare, to bind/tie. It is pronounced either /ˈlɡənd/ or /ˈlɪɡənd/; both are very common.

References

  1. ^ Burdge, J., & Overby, J. (2020). Chemistry – Atoms first (4th ed.). New York, NY: McGraw Hill. doi:9781260571349
  2. ^ Cotton, Frank Albert; Geoffrey Wilkinson; Carlos A. Murillo (1999). Advanced Inorganic Chemistry. Wiley-Interscience. p. 1355. ISBN 978-0471199571.
  3. ^ Miessler, Gary L.; Paul J. Fischer; Donald Arthur Tarr (2013). Inorganic Chemistry. Prentice Hall. p. 696. ISBN 978-0321811059.
  4. ^ Jackson, W. Gregory; Josephine A. McKeon; Silvia Cortez (1 October 2004). "Alfred Werner's Inorganic Counterparts of Racemic and Mesomeric Tartaric Acid: A Milestone Revisited". Inorganic Chemistry. 43 (20): 6249–6254. doi:10.1021/ic040042e. PMID 15446870.
  5. ^ Bowman-James, Kristin (2005). "Alfred Werner Revisited: The Coordination Chemistry of Anions". Accounts of Chemical Research. 38 (8): 671–678. doi:10.1021/ar040071t. PMID 16104690.
  6. ^ Hans Ludwig Schläfer and Günter Gliemann (1969). Basic Principles of Ligand Field Theory. London: Wiley-Interscience. ISBN 0471761001.
  7. ^ Miessler, Gary; Fischer, Paul J.; Tarr, Donald A. (2014). Inorganic Chemistry (5 ed.). Pearson. ISBN 978-0321811059.
  8. ^ Green, M. L. H. (20 September 1995). "A new approach to the formal classification of covalent compounds of the elements". Journal of Organometallic Chemistry. 500 (1–2): 127–148. doi:10.1016/0022-328X(95)00508-N. ISSN 0022-328X.
  9. ^ "mlxz plots – Columbia University", Columbia University, New York.
  10. ^ a b Hartwig, J. F. Organotransition Metal Chemistry, from Bonding to Catalysis; University Science Books: New York, 2010. ISBN 1-891389-53-X
  11. ^ von Zelewsky, A. "Stereochemistry of Coordination Compounds" John Wiley: Chichester, 1995. ISBN 047195599X.
  12. ^ Sauvage, J.-P.; Collin, J.-P.; Chambron, J.-C.; Guillerez, S.; Coudret, C.; Balzani, V.; Barigelletti, F.; De Cola, L.; Flamigni, L. Chem. ReV. 1994, 94, 993-1019
  13. ^ Gavrilova, A. L.; Bosnich, B., "Principles of Mononucleating and Binucleating Ligand Design", Chem. Rev. 2004, volume 104, 349–383. doi:10.1021/cr020604g
  14. ^ Basolo, F.; Pearson, R. G. (1967). Mechanisms of Inorganic Reactions. New York: J. Wiley and Sons.
  15. ^ BioLiP
  16. ^ Tanramluk D, Naripiyakul L, Akavipat R, Gong S, Charoensawan V (2016). "MANORAA (Mapping Analogous Nuclei Onto Residue And Affinity) for identifying protein-ligand fragment interaction, pathways and SNPs". Nucleic Acids Research. 44 (W1): W514-21. doi:10.1093/nar/gkw314. PMC 4987895. PMID 27131358.

External links

  • See the modeling of ligand–receptor–ligand binding in Vu-Quoc, L., Configuration integral (statistical mechanics), 2008. This wiki site is down; see .

ligand, this, article, about, ligands, inorganic, chemistry, ligands, biochemistry, biochemistry, other, uses, disambiguation, coordination, chemistry, ligand, molecule, functional, group, that, binds, central, metal, atom, form, coordination, complex, bonding. This article is about ligands in inorganic chemistry For ligands in biochemistry see Ligand biochemistry For other uses see Ligand disambiguation In coordination chemistry a ligand a is an ion or molecule functional group that binds to a central metal atom to form a coordination complex The bonding with the metal generally involves formal donation of one or more of the ligand s electron pairs often through Lewis bases 1 The nature of metal ligand bonding can range from covalent to ionic Furthermore the metal ligand bond order can range from one to three Ligands are viewed as Lewis bases although rare cases are known to involve Lewis acidic ligands 2 3 Cobalt complex HCo CO 4 with five ligands Metals and metalloids are bound to ligands in almost all circumstances although gaseous naked metal ions can be generated in a high vacuum Ligands in a complex dictate the reactivity of the central atom including ligand substitution rates the reactivity of the ligands themselves and redox Ligand selection requires critical consideration in many practical areas including bioinorganic and medicinal chemistry homogeneous catalysis and environmental chemistry Ligands are classified in many ways including charge size bulk the identity of the coordinating atom s and the number of electrons donated to the metal denticity or hapticity The size of a ligand is indicated by its cone angle Contents 1 History 2 Strong field and weak field ligands 3 Classification of ligands as L and X 4 Polydentate and polyhapto ligand motifs and nomenclature 4 1 Denticity 4 2 Hapticity 5 Ligand motifs 5 1 Trans spanning ligands 5 2 Ambidentate ligand 5 3 Bridging ligand 5 4 Binucleating ligand 5 5 Metal ligand multiple bond 5 6 Spectator ligand 5 7 Bulky ligands 5 8 Chiral ligands 5 9 Hemilabile ligands 5 10 Non innocent ligand 6 Common ligands 6 1 Examples of common ligands by field strength 6 2 Other generally encountered ligands alphabetical 7 Ligand exchange 8 Ligand protein binding database 9 See also 10 Explanatory notes 11 References 12 External linksHistory EditThe composition of coordination complexes have been known since the early 1800s such as Prussian blue and copper vitriol The key breakthrough occurred when Alfred Werner reconciled formulas and isomers He showed among other things that the formulas of many cobalt III and chromium III compounds can be understood if the metal has six ligands in an octahedral geometry The first to use the term ligand were Alfred Werner and Carl Somiesky in relation to silicon chemistry The theory allows one to understand the difference between coordinated and ionic chloride in the cobalt ammine chlorides and to explain many of the previously inexplicable isomers He resolved the first coordination complex called hexol into optical isomers overthrowing the theory that chirality was necessarily associated with carbon compounds 4 5 Strong field and weak field ligands EditMain article Crystal field theory In general ligands are viewed as electron donors and the metals as electron acceptors i e respectively Lewis bases and Lewis acids This description has been semi quantified in many ways e g ECW model Bonding is often described using the formalisms of molecular orbital theory 6 7 Ligands and metal ions can be ordered in many ways one ranking system focuses on ligand hardness see also hard soft acid base theory Metal ions preferentially bind certain ligands In general hard metal ions prefer weak field ligands whereas soft metal ions prefer strong field ligands According to the molecular orbital theory the HOMO Highest Occupied Molecular Orbital of the ligand should have an energy that overlaps with the LUMO Lowest Unoccupied Molecular Orbital of the metal preferential Metal ions bound to strong field ligands follow the Aufbau principle whereas complexes bound to weak field ligands follow Hund s rule Binding of the metal with the ligands results in a set of molecular orbitals where the metal can be identified with a new HOMO and LUMO the orbitals defining the properties and reactivity of the resulting complex and a certain ordering of the 5 d orbitals which may be filled or partially filled with electrons In an octahedral environment the 5 otherwise degenerate d orbitals split in sets of 3 and 2 orbitals for a more in depth explanation see crystal field theory 3 orbitals of low energy dxy dxz and dyz and 2 orbitals of high energy dz2 and dx2 y2 The energy difference between these 2 sets of d orbitals is called the splitting parameter Do The magnitude of Do is determined by the field strength of the ligand strong field ligands by definition increase Do more than weak field ligands Ligands can now be sorted according to the magnitude of Do see the table below This ordering of ligands is almost invariable for all metal ions and is called spectrochemical series For complexes with a tetrahedral surrounding the d orbitals again split into two sets but this time in reverse order 2 orbitals of low energy dz2 and dx2 y2 and 3 orbitals of high energy dxy dxz and dyz The energy difference between these 2 sets of d orbitals is now called Dt The magnitude of Dt is smaller than for Do because in a tetrahedral complex only 4 ligands influence the d orbitals whereas in an octahedral complex the d orbitals are influenced by 6 ligands When the coordination number is neither octahedral nor tetrahedral the splitting becomes correspondingly more complex For the purposes of ranking ligands however the properties of the octahedral complexes and the resulting Do has been of primary interest The arrangement of the d orbitals on the central atom as determined by the strength of the ligand has a strong effect on virtually all the properties of the resulting complexes E g the energy differences in the d orbitals has a strong effect in the optical absorption spectra of metal complexes It turns out that valence electrons occupying orbitals with significant 3 d orbital character absorb in the 400 800 nm region of the spectrum UV visible range The absorption of light what we perceive as the color by these electrons that is excitation of electrons from one orbital to another orbital under influence of light can be correlated to the ground state of the metal complex which reflects the bonding properties of the ligands The relative change in relative energy of the d orbitals as a function of the field strength of the ligands is described in Tanabe Sugano diagrams In cases where the ligand has low energy LUMO such orbitals also participate in the bonding The metal ligand bond can be further stabilised by a formal donation of electron density back to the ligand in a process known as back bonding In this case a filled central atom based orbital donates density into the LUMO of the coordinated ligand Carbon monoxide is the preeminent example a ligand that engages metals via back donation Complementarily ligands with low energy filled orbitals of pi symmetry can serve as pi donor Metal EDTA complex wherein the aminocarboxylate is a hexadentate chelating ligand Cobalt III complex containing six ammonia ligands which are monodentate The chloride is not a ligand Classification of ligands as L and X EditMain article Covalent bond classification method Especially in the area of organometallic chemistry ligands are classified as L and X or combinations of the two The classification scheme the CBC Method for Covalent Bond Classification was popularized by M L H Green and is based on the notion that there are three basic types of ligands represented by the symbols L X and Z which correspond respectively to 2 electron 1 electron and 0 electron neutral ligands 8 9 Another type of ligand worthy of consideration is the LX ligand which as expected from the used conventional representation will donate three electrons if NVE Number of Valence Electrons required Example is alkoxy ligands which is regularly known as X ligand too L ligands are derived from charge neutral precursors and are represented by amines phosphines CO N2 and alkenes X ligands typically are derived from anionic precursors such as chloride but includes ligands where salts of anion do not really exist such as hydride and alkyl Thus the complex IrCl CO PPh3 2 is classified as an MXL3 complex since CO and the two PPh3 ligands are classified as Ls The oxidative addition of H2 to IrCl CO PPh3 2 gives an 18e ML3X3 product IrClH2 CO PPh3 2 EDTA4 is classified as an L2X4 ligand as it features four anions and two neutral donor sites Cp is classified as an L2X ligand 10 Polydentate and polyhapto ligand motifs and nomenclature EditDenticity Edit Main articles Denticity and chelate This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Denticity represented by k refers to the number of times a ligand bonds to a metal through noncontiguous donor sites Many ligands are capable of binding metal ions through multiple sites usually because the ligands have lone pairs on more than one atom Ligands that bind via more than one atom are often termed chelating A ligand that binds through two sites is classified as bidentate and three sites as tridentate The bite angle refers to the angle between the two bonds of a bidentate chelate Chelating ligands are commonly formed by linking donor groups via organic linkers A classic bidentate ligand is ethylenediamine which is derived by the linking of two ammonia groups with an ethylene CH2CH2 linker A classic example of a polydentate ligand is the hexadentate chelating agent EDTA which is able to bond through six sites completely surrounding some metals The number of times a polydentate ligand binds to a metal centre is symbolized by kn where n indicates the number of sites by which a ligand attaches to a metal EDTA4 when it is hexidentate binds as a k6 ligand the amines and the carboxylate oxygen atoms are not contiguous In practice the n value of a ligand is not indicated explicitly but rather assumed The binding affinity of a chelating system depends on the chelating angle or bite angle Complexes of polydentate ligands are called chelate complexes They tend to be more stable than complexes derived from monodentate ligands This enhanced stability called the chelate effect is usually attributed to effects of entropy which favors the displacement of many ligands by one polydentate ligand Related to the chelate effect is the macrocyclic effect A macrocyclic ligand is any large ligand that at least partially surrounds the central atom and bonds to it leaving the central atom at the centre of a large ring The more rigid and the higher its denticity the more inert will be the macrocyclic complex Heme is an example in which the iron atom is at the centre of a porphyrin macrocycle bound to four nitrogen atoms of the tetrapyrrole macrocycle The very stable dimethylglyoximate complex of nickel is a synthetic macrocycle derived from dimethylglyoxime Hapticity Edit Main article Hapticity Hapticity represented by h refers to the number of contiguous atoms that comprise a donor site and attach to a metal center Butadiene forms both h2 and h4 complexes depending on the number of carbon atoms that are bonded to the metal 10 Ligand motifs EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Trans spanning ligands Edit Main article Trans spanning ligand Trans spanning ligands are bidentate ligands that can span coordination positions on opposite sides of a coordination complex 11 Ambidentate ligand Edit Main article Linkage isomerism In contrast to polydentate ligands ambidentate ligands can attach to the central atom in either one of two or more places but not both A example is thiocyanate SCN which can attach at either the sulfur atom or the nitrogen atom Such compounds give rise to linkage isomerism Polyfunctional ligands see especially proteins can bond to a metal center through different ligand atoms to form various isomers clarification needed Bridging ligand Edit Main article Bridging ligand A bridging ligand links two or more metal centers Virtually all inorganic solids with simple formulas are coordination polymers consisting of metal ion centres linked by bridging ligands This group of materials includes all anhydrous binary metal ion halides and pseudohalides Bridging ligands also persist in solution Polyatomic ligands such as carbonate are ambidentate and thus are found to often bind to two or three metals simultaneously Atoms that bridge metals are sometimes indicated with the prefix m Most inorganic solids are polymers by virtue of the presence of multiple bridging ligands Bridging ligands capable of coordinating multiple metal ions have been attracting considerable interest because of their potential use as building blocks for the fabrication of functional multimetallic assemblies 12 Binucleating ligand Edit Main article Binucleating ligand Binucleating ligands bind two metal ions 13 Usually binucleating ligands feature bridging ligands such as phenoxide pyrazolate or pyrazine as well as other donor groups that bind to only one of the two metal ions Metal ligand multiple bond Edit Main article Metal ligand multiple bond Some ligands can bond to a metal center through the same atom but with a different number of lone pairs The bond order of the metal ligand bond can be in part distinguished through the metal ligand bond angle M X R This bond angle is often referred to as being linear or bent with further discussion concerning the degree to which the angle is bent For example an imido ligand in the ionic form has three lone pairs One lone pair is used as a sigma X donor the other two lone pairs are available as L type pi donors If both lone pairs are used in pi bonds then the M N R geometry is linear However if one or both these lone pairs is nonbonding then the M N R bond is bent and the extent of the bend speaks to how much pi bonding there may be h1 Nitric oxide can coordinate to a metal center in linear or bent manner Spectator ligand Edit Main article Spectator ligand A spectator ligand is a tightly coordinating polydentate ligand that does not participate in chemical reactions but removes active sites on a metal Spectator ligands influence the reactivity of the metal center to which they are bound Bulky ligands Edit Main article Ligand cone angle Bulky ligands are used to control the steric properties of a metal center They are used for many reasons both practical and academic On the practical side they influence the selectivity of metal catalysts e g in hydroformylation Of academic interest bulky ligands stabilize unusual coordination sites e g reactive coligands or low coordination numbers Often bulky ligands are employed to simulate the steric protection afforded by proteins to metal containing active sites Of course excessive steric bulk can prevent the coordination of certain ligands The N heterocyclic carbene ligand called IMes is a bulky ligand by virtue of the pair of mesityl groups Chiral ligands Edit Main article Chiral ligand Chiral ligands are useful for inducing asymmetry within the coordination sphere Often the ligand is employed as an optically pure group In some cases such as secondary amines the asymmetry arises upon coordination Chiral ligands are used in homogeneous catalysis such as asymmetric hydrogenation Hemilabile ligands Edit Main article Hemilability Hemilabile ligands contain at least two electronically different coordinating groups and form complexes where one of these is easily displaced from the metal center while the other remains firmly bound a behaviour which has been found to increase the reactivity of catalysts when compared to the use of more traditional ligands Non innocent ligand Edit Main article Non innocent ligand Non innocent ligands bond with metals in such a manner that the distribution of electron density between the metal center and ligand is unclear Describing the bonding of non innocent ligands often involves writing multiple resonance forms that have partial contributions to the overall state Common ligands EditSee also Complex chemistry Naming complexes This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Virtually every molecule and every ion can serve as a ligand for or coordinate to metals Monodentate ligands include virtually all anions and all simple Lewis bases Thus the halides and pseudohalides are important anionic ligands whereas ammonia carbon monoxide and water are particularly common charge neutral ligands Simple organic species are also very common be they anionic RO and RCO 2 or neutral R2O R2S R3 xNHx and R3P The steric properties of some ligands are evaluated in terms of their cone angles Beyond the classical Lewis bases and anions all unsaturated molecules are also ligands utilizing their pi electrons in forming the coordinate bond Also metals can bind to the s bonds in for example silanes hydrocarbons and dihydrogen see also Agostic interaction In complexes of non innocent ligands the ligand is bonded to metals via conventional bonds but the ligand is also redox active Examples of common ligands by field strength Edit In the following table the ligands are sorted by field strength citation needed weak field ligands first Ligand formula bonding atom s in bold Charge Most common denticity Remark s Iodide iodo I monoanionic monodentateBromide bromido Br monoanionic monodentateSulfide thio or less commonly bridging thiolate S2 dianionic monodentate M S or bidentate bridging M S M Thiocyanate S thiocyanato S CN monoanionic monodentate ambidentate see also isothiocyanate below Chloride chlorido Cl monoanionic monodentate also found bridgingNitrate nitrato O NO 2 monoanionic monodentateAzide azido N N 2 monoanionic monodentate Very ToxicFluoride fluoro F monoanionic monodentateHydroxide hydroxido O H monoanionic monodentate often found as a bridging ligandOxalate oxalato O CO CO O 2 dianionic bidentateWater aqua O H2 neutral monodentateNitrite nitrito O N O monoanionic monodentate ambidentate see also nitro Isothiocyanate isothiocyanato N C S monoanionic monodentate ambidentate see also thiocyanate above Acetonitrile acetonitrilo CH3CN neutral monodentatePyridine py C5H5N neutral monodentateAmmonia ammine or less commonly ammino NH3 neutral monodentateEthylenediamine en NH2 CH2 CH2 NH2 neutral bidentate2 2 Bipyridine bipy NC5H4 C5H4N neutral bidentate easily reduced to its radical anion or even to its dianion1 10 Phenanthroline phen C12H8N2 neutral bidentateNitrite nitro N O 2 monoanionic monodentate ambidentate see also nitrito Triphenylphosphine P C6H5 3 neutral monodentateCyanide cyano C N N C monoanionic monodentate can bridge between metals both metals bound to C or one to C and one to N Carbon monoxide carbonyl CO others neutral monodentate can bridge between metals both metals bound to C The entries in the table are sorted by field strength binding through the stated atom i e as a terminal ligand The strength of the ligand changes when the ligand binds in an alternative binding mode e g when it bridges between metals or when the conformation of the ligand gets distorted e g a linear ligand that is forced through steric interactions to bind in a nonlinear fashion Other generally encountered ligands alphabetical Edit In this table other common ligands are listed in alphabetical order Ligand Formula bonding atom s in bold Charge Most common denticity Remark s Acetylacetonate acac CH3 CO CH2 CO CH3 monoanionic bidentate In general bidentate bound through both oxygens but sometimes bound through the central carbon only see also analogous ketimine analoguesAlkenes R2C CR2 neutral compounds with a C C double bondAminopolycarboxylic acids APCAs BAPTA 1 2 bis o aminophenoxy ethane N N N N tetraacetic acid Benzene C6H6 neutral and other arenes1 2 Bis diphenylphosphino ethane dppe C6H5 2P C2H4 P C6H5 2 neutral bidentate1 1 Bis diphenylphosphino methane dppm C6H5 2P CH2 P C6H5 2 neutral Can bond to two metal atoms at once forming dimersCorroles tetradentateCrown ethers neutral primarily for alkali and alkaline earth metal cations2 2 2 cryptand hexadentate primarily for alkali and alkaline earth metal cationsCryptates neutralCyclopentadienyl Cp C5 H 5 monoanionic Although monoanionic by the nature of its occupied molecular orbitals it is capable of acting as a tridentate ligand Diethylenetriamine dien C4H13N3 neutral tridentate related to TACN but not constrained to facial complexationDimethylglyoximate dmgH monoanionic1 4 7 10 tetraazacyclododecane 1 4 7 10 tetraacetic acid DOTA Diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid DTPA pentetic acid Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid EDTA edta4 OOC CH2 2N C2H4 N CH2 COO 2 tetraanionic hexadentateEthylenediaminetriacetate OOC CH2NH C2H4 N CH2 COO 2 trianionic pentadentateEthyleneglycolbis oxyethylenenitrilo tetraacetate egta4 OOC CH2 2N C2H4 O C2H4 O C2H4 N CH2 COO 2 tetraanionic octodentateFura 2 Glycinate glycinato NH2CH2COO monoanionic bidentate other a amino acid anions are comparable but chiral Heme dianionic tetradentate macrocyclic ligandIminodiacetic acid IDA tridentate Used extensively to make radiotracers for scintigraphy by complexing the metastable radionuclide technetium 99m For example in cholescintigraphy HIDA BrIDA PIPIDA and DISIDA are usedNicotianamine Ubiquitous in higher plantsNitrosyl NO cationic bent 1e and linear 3e bonding modeNitrilotriacetic acid NTA Oxo O2 dianion monodentate sometimes bridgingPyrazine N2C4H4 neutral ditopic sometimes bridgingScorpionate ligand tridentateSulfite O SO2 2 S O2 3 monoanionic monodentate ambidentate2 2 6 2 Terpyridine terpy NC5H4 C5H3N C5H4N neutral tridentate meridional bonding onlyTriazacyclononane tacn C2H4 3 NR 3 neutral tridentate macrocyclic ligand see also the N N N trimethylated analogueTricyclohexylphosphine P C6H11 3 or PCy3 neutral monodentateTriethylenetetramine trien C6H18N4 neutral tetradentateTrimethylphosphine P CH3 3 neutral monodentateTris o tolyl phosphine P o tolyl 3 neutral monodentateTris 2 aminoethyl amine tren NH2CH2CH2 3N neutral tetradentateTris 2 diphenylphosphineethyl amine np3 neutral tetradentateTropylium C7 H 7 cationicCarbon dioxide CO2 others neutral see metal carbon dioxide complexPhosphorus trifluoride trifluorophosphorus PF3 neutralLigand exchange EditA ligand exchange also ligand substitution is a type of chemical reaction in which a ligand in a compound is replaced by another One type of pathway for substitution is the ligand dependent pathway In organometallic chemistry this can take place via associative substitution or by dissociative substitution 14 Ligand protein binding database EditBioLiP 15 is a comprehensive ligand protein interaction database with the 3D structure of the ligand protein interactions taken from the Protein Data Bank MANORAA is a webserver for analyzing conserved and differential molecular interaction of the ligand in complex with protein structure homologs from the Protein Data Bank It provides the linkage to protein targets such as its location in the biochemical pathways SNPs and protein RNA baseline expression in target organ 16 See also EditBridging carbonyl Crystal field theory DNA binding ligand Inorganic chemistry Josiphos ligands Ligand dependent pathway Ligand field theory Ligand isomerism Spectrochemical seriesExplanatory notes Edit The word ligand comes from Latin ligare to bind tie It is pronounced either ˈ l aɪ ɡ e n d or ˈ l ɪ ɡ e n d both are very common References Edit Burdge J amp Overby J 2020 Chemistry Atoms first 4th ed New York NY McGraw Hill doi 9781260571349 Cotton Frank Albert Geoffrey Wilkinson Carlos A Murillo 1999 Advanced Inorganic Chemistry Wiley Interscience p 1355 ISBN 978 0471199571 Miessler Gary L Paul J Fischer Donald Arthur Tarr 2013 Inorganic Chemistry Prentice Hall p 696 ISBN 978 0321811059 Jackson W Gregory Josephine A McKeon Silvia Cortez 1 October 2004 Alfred Werner s Inorganic Counterparts of Racemic and Mesomeric Tartaric Acid A Milestone Revisited Inorganic Chemistry 43 20 6249 6254 doi 10 1021 ic040042e PMID 15446870 Bowman James Kristin 2005 Alfred Werner Revisited The Coordination Chemistry of Anions Accounts of Chemical Research 38 8 671 678 doi 10 1021 ar040071t PMID 16104690 Hans Ludwig Schlafer and Gunter Gliemann 1969 Basic Principles of Ligand Field Theory London Wiley Interscience ISBN 0471761001 Miessler Gary Fischer Paul J Tarr Donald A 2014 Inorganic Chemistry 5 ed Pearson ISBN 978 0321811059 Green M L H 20 September 1995 A new approach to the formal classification of covalent compounds of the elements Journal of Organometallic Chemistry 500 1 2 127 148 doi 10 1016 0022 328X 95 00508 N ISSN 0022 328X mlxz plots Columbia University Columbia University New York a b Hartwig J F Organotransition Metal Chemistry from Bonding to Catalysis University Science Books New York 2010 ISBN 1 891389 53 X von Zelewsky A Stereochemistry of Coordination Compounds John Wiley Chichester 1995 ISBN 047195599X Sauvage J P Collin J P Chambron J C Guillerez S Coudret C Balzani V Barigelletti F De Cola L Flamigni L Chem ReV 1994 94 993 1019 Gavrilova A L Bosnich B Principles of Mononucleating and Binucleating Ligand Design Chem Rev 2004 volume 104 349 383 doi 10 1021 cr020604g Basolo F Pearson R G 1967 Mechanisms of Inorganic Reactions New York J Wiley and Sons BioLiP Tanramluk D Naripiyakul L Akavipat R Gong S Charoensawan V 2016 MANORAA Mapping Analogous Nuclei Onto Residue And Affinity for identifying protein ligand fragment interaction pathways and SNPs Nucleic Acids Research 44 W1 W514 21 doi 10 1093 nar gkw314 PMC 4987895 PMID 27131358 External links Edit Look up ligand in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ligands See the modeling of ligand receptor ligand binding in Vu Quoc L Configuration integral statistical mechanics 2008 This wiki site is down see this article in the Internet Archive from 2012 April 28 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ligand amp oldid 1151477303, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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