enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lanthanide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanthanide

    The lack of orbital interactions combined with the lanthanide contraction means that the lanthanides change in size across the series but that their chemistry remains much the same. This allows for easy tuning of the steric environments and examples exist where this has been used to improve the catalytic activity of the complex [ 31 ] [ 32 ...

  3. Lanthanum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanthanum

    Lanthanum makes up 39 mg/kg of the Earth's crust, [48] [49] behind neodymium at 41.5 mg/kg and cerium at 66.5 mg/kg. Despite being among the so-called "rare earth metals", lanthanum is thus not rare at all, but it is historically so-named because it is rarer than "common earths" such as lime and magnesia, and at the time it was recognized only ...

  4. Lanthanide compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanthanide_compounds

    Lanthanide metals react exothermically with hydrogen to form LnH 2, dihydrides. [1] With the exception of Eu and Yb, which resemble the Ba and Ca hydrides (non-conducting, transparent salt-like compounds),they form black pyrophoric, conducting compounds [6] where the metal sub-lattice is face centred cubic and the H atoms occupy tetrahedral sites. [1]

  5. d-block contraction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-block_contraction

    The outer valence electrons are more strongly attracted by the nucleus causing the observed increase in ionization potentials. The d-block contraction can be compared to the lanthanide contraction , which is caused by inadequate shielding of the nuclear charge by electrons occupying f orbitals.

  6. Relativistic quantum chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relativistic_quantum_chemistry

    Bohr calculated that a 1s orbital electron of a hydrogen atom orbiting at the Bohr radius of 0.0529 nm travels at nearly 1/137 the speed of light. [11] One can extend this to a larger element with an atomic number Z by using the expression v ≈ Z c 137 {\displaystyle v\approx {\frac {Zc}{137}}} for a 1s electron, where v is its radial velocity ...

  7. 18-electron rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/18-electron_rule

    The rule is based on the fact that the valence orbitals in the electron configuration of transition metals consist of five (n−1)d orbitals, one ns orbital, and three np orbitals, where n is the principal quantum number. These orbitals can collectively accommodate 18 electrons as either bonding or non-bonding electron pairs.

  8. Unpaired electron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unpaired_electron

    In chemistry, an unpaired electron is an electron that occupies an orbital of an atom singly, rather than as part of an electron pair. Each atomic orbital of an atom (specified by the three quantum numbers n, l and m) has a capacity to contain two electrons ( electron pair ) with opposite spins .

  9. Ligand field theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligand_field_theory

    The metal also has six valence orbitals that span these irreducible representations - the s orbital is labeled a 1g, a set of three p-orbitals is labeled t 1u, and the d z 2 and d x 2 −y 2 orbitals are labeled e g. The six σ-bonding molecular orbitals result from the combinations of ligand SALCs with metal orbitals of the same symmetry. [8]