Chemical Forums
Chemistry Forums for Students => Undergraduate General Chemistry Forum => Topic started by: mana on September 11, 2019, 01:17:16 PM
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hi all
why some elements such as Fe, Ni, Co and etc have 2 valencies? for example, these three elements all have 2 and 3 valence number, but their electronic configurations are different ???
can anyone explain why?
thanks for your help in advance
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It is a matter of the d-orbitals, ou gave already the configurations.
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is the stable electron configuration important too? for example, half-full orbitals can stabilize group 5 elements in the periodic table
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My rough mental image is that, at transition elements, the outer electrons have several energies close to an other. Depending on the molecules, for instance the proportion of oxygen, only the shallower electrons participate, or the somewhat deeper participate too.
This representation is very incomplete, because the ability to bind depends on how the atom (or ion if you wish) will look like in the molecule, not just the lone atom prior to binding, and because several levels are available and rearrange, this is hard to predict.
Why Fe, Co and Ni have the same usual valences, I ignore that.
This isn't limited to transition elements. C for instance can build CO or CO2. It has [He]2s22p2 configuration, where 2s and 2p have the same energy in a hydrogen atom (the difference is really tiny) but differ a bit in a carbon atom due to electrons interactions.
As our world is complicated, you could have a look at how many oxidation states each element can have, beyond the most usual ones:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxidation_state#List_of_oxidation_states_of_the_elements
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It also depends on the stability of electronic configurations
Like Pb can show two oxidation number +2 and +4
Check their electronic configuration and you will find them stable as they are fully filled.