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  2. Transition metal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transition_metal

    An electron may jump from a predominantly ligand orbital to a predominantly metal orbital, giving rise to a ligand-to-metal charge-transfer (LMCT) transition. These can most easily occur when the metal is in a high oxidation state.

  3. 18-electron rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/18-electron_rule

    The 18-electron rule is a chemical rule of thumb used primarily for predicting and rationalizing formulas for stable transition metal complexes, especially organometallic compounds. [1] 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 n s orbital ...

  4. Electron configuration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron_configuration

    The naïve application of the aufbau principle leads to a well-known paradox (or apparent paradox) in the basic chemistry of the transition metals. Potassium and calcium appear in the periodic table before the transition metals, and have electron configurations [Ar] 4s 1 and [Ar] 4s 2 respectively, i.e. the 4s-orbital is filled before the 3d ...

  5. d electron count - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D_electron_count

    The d electron count or number of d electrons is a chemistry formalism used to describe the electron configuration of the valence electrons of a transition metal center in a coordination complex. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The d electron count is an effective way to understand the geometry and reactivity of transition metal complexes.

  6. Spin states (d electrons) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spin_states_(d_electrons)

    Spin states when describing transition metal coordination complexes refers to the potential spin configurations of the central metal's d electrons. For several oxidation states, metals can adopt high-spin and low-spin configurations. The ambiguity only applies to first row metals, because second- and third-row metals are invariably low-spin.

  7. Valence electron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valence_electron

    So as opposed to main-group elements, a valence electron for a transition metal is defined as an electron that resides outside a noble-gas core. [3] Thus, generally, the d electrons in transition metals behave as valence electrons although they are not in the outermost shell.

  8. Octet rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octet_rule

    For transition metals, molecules tend to obey the 18-electron rule which corresponds to the utilization of valence d, s and p orbitals to form bonding and non-bonding orbitals. However, unlike the octet rule for main-group elements, transition metals do not strictly obey the 18-electron rule and the valence electron count can vary between 12 ...

  9. Polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyhedral_skeletal...

    Additionally there are isolobal transition-metal units. For example, Fe(CO) 3 provides 2 electrons. The derivation of this is briefly as follows: Fe has 8 valence electrons. Each carbonyl group is a net 2 electron donor after the internal σ- and π-bonding are taken into account making 14 electrons.