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A '''transition element''' is a [[chemical element]]  whose [[atomic electron configuration]] of the ground (lowest energy) state has an incompletely filled ''d'' sub-shell.  The symbol "''d''" stands for an [[Atomic orbital#Solutions of the atomic Schrödinger equation|atomic orbital]] with [[angular momentum (quantum)|angular momentum]] quantum number ''ℓ'' = 2.  The electron configuration of transition element atoms contains the orbital occupancy (''nd'')<sup>''k''</sup>,  1 &le; ''k'' &le; 9,  where ''n'' is the [[principal  quantum number]] of the ''d''-orbital. The incomplete electronic ''d'' subshell gives rise to some characteristic magnetic properties ([[paramagnetism]] and [[ferromagnetism]]) and crystals and solutions of transition metal complexes that are brightly colored.  In Table II, taken from [[NIST]],<ref>[http://physics.nist.gov/PhysRefData/IonEnergy/tblNew.html NIST  Ground levels and ionization energies for the neutral atoms] Retrieved October 1, 2009</ref> it is shown that neutral transition element atoms also have one or two electrons in an ''s'' orbital with principal quantum number one higher than that of the partially filled  ''d'' sub-shell.   
A '''transition element''' is a [[chemical element]]  whose [[atomic electron configuration]] of the ground (lowest energy) state has an incompletely filled ''d'' sub-shell.  The symbol "''d''" stands for an [[Atomic orbital#Solutions of the atomic Schrödinger equation|atomic orbital]] with [[angular momentum (quantum)|angular momentum]] quantum number ''ℓ'' = 2.  The electron configuration of transition element atoms contains the orbital occupancy (''nd'')<sup>''k''</sup>,  1 &le; ''k'' &le; 9,  where ''n'' is the [[principal  quantum number]] of the ''d''-orbital. The incomplete electronic ''d'' subshell gives rise to some characteristic magnetic properties ([[paramagnetism]] and [[ferromagnetism]]) and crystals and solutions of transition metal complexes that are brightly colored.  In Table II, taken from [[NIST]],<ref>[http://physics.nist.gov/PhysRefData/IonEnergy/tblNew.html NIST  Ground levels and ionization energies for the neutral atoms] Retrieved October 1, 2009</ref> it is shown that neutral transition element atoms also have one or two electrons in an ''s'' orbital with principal quantum number one higher than that of the partially filled  ''d'' sub-shell.   


Table I shows the part of the Periodic Table that contains the first three series of transition elements with ''n'' = 3, 4, and 5, respectively.  The elements in the fourth transition series (period 7 of the periodic table), are formally transition elements. They are  man-made [except for Actinium (''Z'' = 87)] and short-lived, not much is known about their compounds  and accordingly they are neither shown in Table I and II, nor discussed in this article.
Table I shows the part of the Periodic Table that contains the first three series of transition elements with principal quantum number ''n'' = 3, 4, and 5, respectively.  The elements in the fourth transition series (period 7 of the periodic table), are formally transition elements. They are  man-made [except for Actinium (''Z'' = 87)] and short-lived, not much is known about their compounds  and accordingly they are not shown in Table I and II, and not discussed in this article.


<table align = "center" width="80%"  style="background: silver; border: 2px red solid; border-collapse: collapse;">
<table align = "center" width="80%"  style="background: silver; border: 2px red solid; border-collapse: collapse;">
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<caption  style = "background: silver >  
<caption  style = "background: silver >  
<h4>
<h4>
I. Rows and columns of the [[Periodic Table of Elements]] containing transition elements </h4>
I. Rows and columns of the [[Periodic table of elements|Periodic table]]containing transition elements </h4>
<center> The [[atomic number]] ''Z'' is between brackets</center>
<center> The [[atomic number]] ''Z'' is between brackets</center>
</caption>
</caption>
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The most striking similarities shared by the transition elements is  that they are all metals&mdash;which is why they are often called ''transition metals''&mdash;and that most of them are hard, strong, and lustrous.  They have high melting and boiling points, and, being metals, are good conductors of heat and electricity.  Many of the elements are technologically important: [[iron]], [[nickel]], [[cobalt]], [[titanium]], [[platinum]], and others are used in heterogeneous [[catalysis]].  They accelerate chemical reactions in which organic molecules are isomerized, built up from simple molecules, oxidized, hydrogenated, or polymerized.  Much of the current research on the chemistry of transition element complexes is instigated by their industrial importance  as catalysts.
The most striking similarities shared by the transition elements is  that they are all metals&mdash;which is why they are often called ''transition metals''&mdash;and that most of them are hard, strong, and lustrous.  They have high melting and boiling points, and, being metals, are good conductors of heat and electricity.  Many of the elements are technologically important: [[iron]], [[nickel]], [[cobalt]], [[titanium]], [[platinum]], and others are used in heterogeneous [[catalysis]].  They accelerate chemical reactions in which organic molecules are isomerized, built up from simple molecules, oxidized, hydrogenated, or polymerized.  Much of the current research on the chemistry of transition element complexes is instigated by their industrial importance  as catalysts.


Several of the metals and their compounds are [[ferromagnetic]]. This is a collective effect that appears in the solid state and is due to the aligning of unpaired [[electron spin]]s on the transition element atoms. At low temperature several compounds, notably the oxides MnO, FeO, CoO, and NiO,  make a phase transition to an [[antiferromagnetism| antiferromagnetic]] form.
Several of the metals and their compounds are [[ferromagnetic]]. Ferromagnetism is a collective effect that appears in the solid state and is due to the aligning of the unpaired [[electron spin]]s of the metal ions. At low temperature several compounds, notably the oxides MnO, FeO, CoO, and NiO,  make a phase transition to [[antiferromagnetism| antiferromagnetic]] form.


The transition elements form many useful alloys, among themselves and with other metallic elements. Most of the transition  elements can be dissolved in water and other polar solvents by the action of acids and form complexes in solution, although  the "noble" metals platinum, [[silver]], and [[gold]] are difficult to dissolve by non-oxidizing acids. For obvious reasons the elements [[copper]], silver, and gold are referred to as coinage metals<ref>B. H. Lipshutz and Y. Yamamoto. ''Introduction'', Special issue of Chemical Reviews on Coinage Metals in Organic Synthesis, 2008, vol. '''108''', pp.  2793–2795 [http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cr800415x DOI]</ref>. Note that copper belongs to the class of coinage metals, but is not a noble metal.  
The transition elements form many useful alloys, among themselves and with other metallic elements. Most of the transition  elements can be dissolved in water and other polar solvents by the action of acids and form complexes in solution, although  the "noble" metals platinum, [[silver]], and [[gold]] are difficult to dissolve by non-oxidizing acids. For obvious reasons the elements [[copper]], silver, and gold are referred to as coinage metals<ref>B. H. Lipshutz and Y. Yamamoto. ''Introduction'', Special issue of Chemical Reviews on Coinage Metals in Organic Synthesis, 2008, vol. '''108''', pp.  2793–2795 [http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cr800415x DOI]</ref>. Note that copper belongs to the class of coinage metals, but is not a noble metal.  


Several transition elements are important to the chemistry of living systems, the most familiar examples being iron, cobalt, copper, and molybdenum. Iron is by far the most widespread and important transition metal that has a function in living systems; proteins containing iron participate in two main processes, oxygen transport and electron transfer (i.e., oxidation–reduction) reactions. There are also a number of substances that act to store and transport iron itself.
Several transition elements are important to the chemistry of living systems, the most familiar examples being iron, cobalt, copper, and molybdenum. Iron is by far the most widespread and important transition metal that has a function in living systems; proteins containing iron participate in two main processes, oxygen transport and electron transfer (i.e., oxidation–reduction) reactions. There are also a number of substances that act to store and transport iron itself.
==Ionic bonding==
==Ionic bonding==
The outer ''s''-electrons of the transition metals are easily lost to the bonding partners (the ''ligands'') of the metal.  Also one or more ''d''-electrons of the metal are usually lost to its ligands. In other words, most transition element compounds  show ionic chemical bonds. Common ligands are: oxide (O<sup>2&minus;</sup>), halides (F<sup>&minus;</sup>,  Cl<sup>&minus;</sup>, Br<sup>&minus;</sup>,  I<sup>&minus;</sup>), hydrates (H<sub>2</sub>O, OH<sup>&minus;</sup>), cyanide (CN<sup>&minus;</sup>), and sulfate (SO<sub>4</sub><sup>2&minus;</sup>).  Ligands are either negative ions, such as Cl<sup>&minus;</sup>  or neutral molecules with one or more free electron pairs, such as water.
The outer ''s''-electrons of the transition metals are easily lost to the bonding partners (the ''ligands'') of the metal.  Also one or more ''d''-electrons of the metal are usually lost to its ligands. In other words, most transition element compounds  show ionic chemical bonds. Common ligands are: oxide (O<sup>2&minus;</sup>), halides (F<sup>&minus;</sup>,  Cl<sup>&minus;</sup>, Br<sup>&minus;</sup>,  I<sup>&minus;</sup>), hydrates (H<sub>2</sub>O, OH<sup>&minus;</sup>), cyanide (CN<sup>&minus;</sup>), and sulfate (SO<sub>4</sub><sup>2&minus;</sup>).  Ligands are either negative ions, such as Cl<sup>&minus;</sup>  or neutral molecules with one or more free electron pairs, such as water.
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==Abundance of the transition elements==
==Abundance of the transition elements==
Iron is the most common transition element in the Earth's solid crust.  It takes fourth place among the  elements  and is the  second metal in the crust after [[aluminum]]. The elements titanium, manganese, zirconium, vanadium, and chromium are abundant and appear in concentrations larger than 100 grams  per ton. Some of the most important and useful transition elements are rare, for instance, tungsten, platinum, gold, and silver. Obviously they are among the most expensive of the transition metals.
Iron is the most common transition element in the Earth's solid crust.  It takes fourth place among the  elements  and is the  second metal in the crust after [[aluminium]]. The elements titanium, manganese, zirconium, vanadium, and chromium are abundant and appear in concentrations larger than 100 grams  per ton. Some of the most important and useful transition elements are rare, for instance, tungsten, platinum, gold, and silver. Obviously they are among the most expensive of the transition metals.


In antiquity the elements iron (ferrum), copper (cuprum), silver (argentum), and gold (aurum) were already widely known.  The other regular transition elements were  recognized as elements from the early 18th century onward when analytic chemistry  techniques were refined. Rhenium (''Z'' = 75) was the latest transition metal discovered in nature; it was detected in 1925 in platinum ores and in the [[niobium]] mineral [[columbite]]. The element is extremely rare, no concentrated ores have been found thus far.  
In antiquity the elements iron (ferrum), copper (cuprum), silver (argentum), and gold (aurum) were already widely known.  The other regular transition elements were  recognized as elements from the early 18th century onward when analytic chemistry  techniques were refined. Rhenium (''Z'' = 75) was the latest transition metal discovered in nature; it was detected in 1925 in platinum ores and in the [[niobium]] mineral [[columbite]]. The element is extremely rare, no concentrated ores have been found thus far.  


The element technetium (''Z'' = 43) is man-made, it was first made in 1937 by bombarding molybdenum with deuterons, and has  so far not been found in nature.  All isotopes of technetium are radioactive, although the half-lifes of three of the common isotopes are long (Tc-97: 2.6&times;10<sup>6</sup>, Tc-98: 4.2&times;10<sup>6</sup>, and Tc-99: 210&thinsp;000 years).  The Tc isotopes can be isolated in considerable quantities from the fission products of nuclear reactors.
The element technetium (''Z'' = 43) is man-made, it was first made in 1937 by bombarding molybdenum with deuterons, and has  so far not been found in nature.  All isotopes of technetium are radioactive, although the half-lifes of three of the common isotopes are long (Tc-97: 2.6&times;10<sup>6</sup>, Tc-98: 4.2&times;10<sup>6</sup>, and Tc-99: 210&thinsp;000 years).  The Tc isotopes can be isolated in considerable quantities from the fission products of nuclear reactors.
==Theory==
==Theory==
In a landmark paper<ref>H. Bethe, ''Termaufspaltung in Kristallen'' [Term splitting in cystals], Annalen der Physik, Fünfte Folge, vol. '''3''', pp. 133&ndash;206 (1929) [http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k15392p.pleinepage.r=Annalen+der+Physic.f141.langFR Online]. &nbsp;&nbsp; English translation: ''Selected Works of Hans Bethe'', World Scientific, Singapore (1997)
: ''See [[Crystal field theory]]''
[http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=5baAG1WqgYQC&oi=fnd&pg=PR5&dq=%22hans+Bethe%22++%22Annalen+der+Physik%22+1929&ots=9x5FdvBvAf&sig=eLNRyGjIRsdUezcmnDUARgP1MKU#v=onepage&q=&f=false Google Books (online)]
</ref> [[Hans Bethe]] introduced in 1929 a model known as the crystal field model. This model successfully accounts for some magnetic properties and colors  of transition metal complexes. It describes  a transition metal ion in an electrostatic field created by the surrounding charged or dipolar  ligands. The electrostatic field has [[point group]] symmetry lower than the full rotation symmetry [[SO(3)]] of the free atom. Because of the symmetry lowering the (2''S''+1)(2''L''+1) different functions that are degenerate in the free atom (a so-called "term" represented by a [[term symbol]]) will split up, that is, will obtain different energies. Because the crystal field is non-magnetic, the total electron spin ''S'' will be conserved. However, the electronic orbital angular momentum ''L'' will be quenched, i.e., inside the crystal field [[angular momentum (quantum) |angular momentum]] is not conserved, ''L'' is no longer a good quantum number.
 
The crystal field model does not attempt to describe why the configuration of atoms and surrounding ligands  is stable. After 1929 the crystal field model  was extended by  the admixture of ligand orbitals into the atomic orbitals of the central ion. An important contributor was the American physicist [[John Van Vleck]].  The extended model propagated by Van Vleck is known as the [[ligand field model]].  The ligand field model aims at predicting correct binding energies in addition to the explanation of  magnetic and spectral properties.
 
In order to give the flavor of the crystal field model, we will consider below the simplest case: one electron in an electric field of octahedral symmetry. An example is the ion [Ti(H<sub>2</sub>O)<sub>6</sub>]<sup>3+</sup>. It will be shown that the five ''d''-orbitals that have equal energy (are "degenerate") in the free ion, will be linearly combined to a degenerate set of three and a degenerate set of two orbitals. In an octahedral complex the two-fold degenerate set lies higher in energy than the three-fold degenerate set. In a tetrahedral complex the same splitting occurs, but the order is reversed:  the two-fold degenerate set lies below the three-fold degenerate set. Electronic transitions from the lower to the higher orbital correspond to excitation energies that are in the visible part of the electromagnetic spectrum and are responsible for the color of most of the transition metal compounds.
 
In general, the relative magnitudes of ''d'' orbital splittings for a given ion with different ligands is determined by the ligands. This ordering of ligands according to their ability to split the energies of the ''d'' orbitals is called the ''spectrochemical series''. From weakest to strongest the splittings are: I<sup>&minus;</sup> < Br<sup>&minus;</sup> <  Cl<sup>&minus;</sup> <  OH<sup>&minus;</sup> < F<sup>&minus;</sup> < H<sub>2</sub>O < pyridine < NH<sub>3</sub> < ethylenediamine < CN<sup>&minus;</sup>. 
 
===Octahedral potential===
{{Image|Octahedral crystal field.png|right|250px|Transition metal ion (red) in octahedron of ligands(black). The ligands are in the centers of the faces of the cube. }}
In the figure we see six ligands in the centers of the six faces of a cube. The field inside the cube created by the ligands (that are either charged or dipolar), satisfies the [[Laplace equation]]
:<math>
\nabla^2 V(r, \theta, \phi) = 0,
</math>
where ''r'', &theta;, and &phi; are [[spherical polar coordinates]] of a point with respect to a system of axes centered on the central ion. It is known that the regular [[solid harmonics]] ''R''<sup>''m''</sup><sub>''ℓ''</sub> form a solution of the Laplace equation. Hence, the following expansion is exact
:<math>
V(r, \theta, \phi) = \sum_{\ell=0}^\infty \sum_{m=-\ell}^{\ell}\; A_{\ell,m} R^m_\ell(r,\theta,\phi).
</math>
In quantum mechanics a symmetry operation, such as a rotation around an axis, reflection in a plane, or inversion in a point, is defined as an operation that leaves invariant (commutes with)  the energy (Hamilton) operator of the system. Here we turn the argument around and  adapt the expansion of the potential field to the octahedral symmetry in order that the expansion becomes invariant under the octahedral symmetry operations.
 
One of the octahedral symmetry operations is inversion with respect to the origin (the position of the  metal ion). It is known that regular harmonics are mapped onto themselves multiplied by a factor (&minus;1)<sup>''ℓ''</sup> by inversion. In other words, only terms with even ''ℓ'' will appear in the expansion of ''V''. The function for  ''ℓ'' = ''m'' = 0 is simply unity, the constant function of value one.
 
As first  shown by Bethe by means of  group theoretical [[character (group theory)|character relations]],  there are no linear combinations of the five ''ℓ'' = 2 functions that span the totally symmetric representation of the octahedral group&mdash;no linear combinations can be found that are invariant . Hence the first ''ℓ'', beyond ''ℓ'' = 0, that can contribute has value  ''ℓ'' = 4. Also  ''ℓ''-values of 6, 8, &hellip;, can give totally symmetric octahedral functions, but we will see below that in the example at hand (a single ''d''-electron inside the cube) such values will not contribute.
 
It can be shown that the following function is the only totally invariant function of ''ℓ'' = 4:
:<math>
V_4(r, \theta, \phi) \equiv \sqrt{14}\,R^0_4 + \sqrt{5}\,( R^4_4 + R^{-4}_4).
</math>
The octahedral potential becomes (truncated at ''ℓ'' = 4):
:<math>
V_\mathrm{oct}(r, \theta, \phi) = A + B\, V_4(r, \theta, \phi) \,
</math>
where the constants ''A'' and ''B'' may be used as adjustable parameters.
===First order perturbation theory===
The free ion is in a five-fold degenerate state  with  [[term symbol]] <sup>2</sup>''D'', i.e., the electron can be in any of the five ''d''-orbitals and has electron spin &frac12;. The ion is perturbed by the crystal field. If this field is weak, first-order [[perturbation theory]] suffices. This means that we have to set up the perturbation matrix  '''V''' of ''V''<sub>oct</sub> on basis of the five d-orbitals,
 
:<math>
\mathbf{V}=
\begin{pmatrix}
\langle d_{-2} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct} \;|\; d_{-2}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{-2} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{-1}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{-2} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{0}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{-2} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{1}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{-2} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{2}  \rangle  \\
\langle d_{-1} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{-2}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{-1} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{-1}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{-1} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{0}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{-1} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{1}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{-1} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{2}  \rangle  \\
\langle d_{0} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{-2}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{0} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{-1}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{0} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{0}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{0} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{1}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{0} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{2}  \rangle  \\
\langle d_{1} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{-2}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{1} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{-1}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{1} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{0}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{1} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{1}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{1} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{2}  \rangle  \\
\langle d_{2} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{-2}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{2} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{-1}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{2} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{0}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{2} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{1}  \rangle  &
\langle d_{2} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{2}  \rangle  \\
\end{pmatrix}.
</math>
 
The angular part of the ''d''<sub>''m''</sub> orbital is the [[spherical harmonic]] ''Y''<sup>''m''</sup><sub>''ℓ''</sub>.
 
According to perturbation theory we must diagonalize the matrix '''V''' (find its eigenvalues and eigenvectors). Nowadays, in the era of computers, it is easy to diagonalize this matrix numerically. In the days of Bethe this was not possible, so that he was forced to find linear combinations of the ''d''-orbitals with well-defined symmetry properties (technically: linear combinations that span irreducible representations of the octahedral group). Bethe found that there are 3 + 2 combinations, which we do not need explicitly, but symbolically are written as
:<math>
\{|t_{2g},1\rangle, \quad |t_{2g},2\rangle,\quad |t_{2g},3\rangle\}\quad \hbox{and}\quad \{|e_{g},1\rangle, \quad|e_{g},2\rangle\}
</math>
The first three span the 3-dimensional irreducible representation ''T''<sub>2''g''</sub> and the second two the 2-dimensional irreducible representation ''E''<sub>''g''</sub>.
Just as the original ''d''<sub>''m''</sub> orbitals, the functions are orthonormal, that is, the transformation between the two sets is orthogonal.
Group theory shows that
:<math>
\langle t_{2g},i \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; t_{2g},j \rangle =  \delta_{ij}(A + X),\qquad
\langle e_{g},i \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; e_{g},j \rangle =  \delta_{ij}(A + Y),\quad\hbox{and}\quad
\langle t_{2g},i \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; e_{g},j \rangle = 0,
</math>
where  ''X'' and ''Y''  are matrix elements of ''V''<sub>4</sub> multiplied by the potential parameter  ''B''. Transformation of '''V''' to a basis of these group theoretically determined functions gives the matrix the following diagonal form
:<math>
\mathbf{V} \rarr
\begin{pmatrix}
A+X  &  0    &  0    &    0 & 0  \\
0    & A+X  &  0    &    0 & 0    \\
0    &  0    &  A+X  &    0 & 0  \\
0    &  0    &  0    & A+Y  & 0  \\
0    &  0    &  0    &    0 & A+Y  \\
\end{pmatrix}.
</math>
Because this matrix is diagonal it means that we have found the eigenvalues (the diagonal elements) and the eigenvectors (the group theoretical functions). The first eigenvalue (energy of the state of ''T''<sub>2''g''</sub> symmetry) is 3-fold degenerate and the energy of the state of ''E''<sub>''g''</sub> is 2-fold degenerate. The energy difference between the two states is (<i>A</i>+ ''Y'') &minus;(<i>A</i>+ ''X'') = ''Y'' &minus; ''X'' &equiv; 10Dq. The notation 10Dq is traditional.
 
Since the octahedral potential consists of regular solid harmonics we may apply the [[Wigner-Eckart theorem]]
:<math>
\langle d_{m} \;|\;R^\mu_{\ell} \;|\; d_{m}  \rangle \,
\propto\,  (-1)^m \begin{pmatrix} 2  & \ell & 2\\ -m & \mu & m \end{pmatrix}
</math>
where the quantity between round brackets is a Wigner [[3j-symbol]], a real number depending on the quantum numbers shown in the symbol. The proportionality factor is independent of ''m'' and &mu;. Because the 3j-symbol is equal to zero whenever ''ℓ'' > 4, it follows that higher than ''ℓ'' = 4 potential terms do not contribute in first-order of perturbation theory.
 
===Trace of perturbation matrix===
In order to find an expression for the matrix elements ''X'' and ''Y'', it is noted that
the [[trace (mathematics)|trace]] of the perturbation matrix is defined as
:<math>
\mathrm{Tr}(\mathbf{V}) = \sum_{m=-2}^2  \langle d_{m} \;|\;V_\mathrm{oct}\;|\; d_{m}  \rangle
</math>
Since
:<math>
\sum_{m=-2}^2  (-1)^m \begin{pmatrix} 2  & \ell & 2\\ -m & \mu & m \end{pmatrix}\, \propto
\, \sqrt{5}\, \delta_{\ell, 0}\,\delta_{m,0}
</math>
it follows that ''V''<sub>4</sub> does not contribute to the trace (it consist of ''ℓ'' = 4 terms only). Now,
:<math>
\mathrm{Tr}(\mathbf{V}) = \sum_{m=-2}^2  \langle d_{m} \;|A\;| \; d_{m}  \rangle = 5A.
</math>
The trace of the original matrix is equal to the trace of the diagonal matrix, because the two matrices are connected by a orthogonal transformation. Hence
:<math>
5A+3X+2Y = 5A \quad\hbox{and}\quad Y-X =10 \mathrm{Dq} \Longrightarrow X = -4 \mathrm{Dq}, \; Y = 6 \mathrm{Dq}.
</math>
===Energy level scheme===
{{Image|Octahedral levels.png|right|350px|Energy levels of a one-electron ion in an octahedral field. The electron (red arrow) is drawn in one orbital, but in reality is with equal probability in all the orbitals of the  same energy.}}
The first-order energies (eigenvalues of '''V''') are shown in the figure on the right. The ''t''<sub>2''g''</sub> energies are shifted down over a distance ''X'' = 4Dq and the ''e''<sub>''g''</sub> energies are shifted up by ''Y'' = 6Dq.
 
The two most important conclusions are:
* There is one unpaired electron in the lowest energy state. This means that the complex is paramagnetic, the unpaired electron will align in a magnetic field.
* An excitation from ''t''<sub>2g</sub> to ''e''<sub>''g''</sub> is possible. The excitation energy is equal to 10Dq. Typically the value of 10Dq is around 20&thinsp;000 cm<sup>&minus;1</sup>, or 500 nm. This is in the visible region of the electromagnetic spectrum and explains the color of the complex.


Finally, it must be pointed out that strictly speaking the ''t''<sub>2g</sub> to ''e''<sub>''g''</sub> transition is forbidden under the usual dipole operator associated with the electromagnetic field. This is  because the dipole is ''ungerade'' (odd) under inversion and the states are ''gerade'' (even, hence the subscripts ''g''.)  A quadrupole transition would be allowed but is much to weak. It turns out that the transition is allowed because of [[vibronic coupling]]. This means that the [[Born-Oppenheimer approximation]] is not strictly valid, the vibration of the nuclei and the electron is coupled (hence the name "vibronic"). In the Born-Oppenheimer approximation it is assumed that the motions are completely uncoupled and the transition is forbidden.  The transition, being forbidden in the Born-Oppenheimer model, is relatively weak.
In general, the relative magnitudes of ''d'' orbital splittings for a given ion with different ligands is determined by the ligands. This ordering of ligands according to their ability to split the energies of the ''d'' orbitals is called the [[spectrochemical series]]. From weakest to strongest the splittings are: I<sup>&minus;</sup> < Br<sup>&minus;</sup> <  Cl<sup>&minus;</sup> <  OH<sup>&minus;</sup> < F<sup>&minus;</sup> < H<sub>2</sub>O < [[pyridine]] < NH<sub>3</sub> < [[ethylenediamine]] < CN<sup>&minus;</sup>.


==Reference==
==Reference==
<references />
<references />

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A transition element is a chemical element whose atomic electron configuration of the ground (lowest energy) state has an incompletely filled d sub-shell. The symbol "d" stands for an atomic orbital with angular momentum quantum number = 2. The electron configuration of transition element atoms contains the orbital occupancy (nd)k, 1 ≤ k ≤ 9, where n is the principal quantum number of the d-orbital. The incomplete electronic d subshell gives rise to some characteristic magnetic properties (paramagnetism and ferromagnetism) and crystals and solutions of transition metal complexes that are brightly colored. In Table II, taken from NIST,[1] it is shown that neutral transition element atoms also have one or two electrons in an s orbital with principal quantum number one higher than that of the partially filled d sub-shell.

Table I shows the part of the Periodic Table that contains the first three series of transition elements with principal quantum number n = 3, 4, and 5, respectively. The elements in the fourth transition series (period 7 of the periodic table), are formally transition elements. They are man-made [except for Actinium (Z = 87)] and short-lived, not much is known about their compounds and accordingly they are not shown in Table I and II, and not discussed in this article.

I. Rows and columns of the Periodic tablecontaining transition elements

The atomic number Z is between brackets
Group 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
1st series Sc (21) Ti (22) V (23) Cr (24) Mn (25) Fe (26) Co (27) Ni (28) Cu (29)
2nd series Y (39) Zr (40) Nb (41) Mo (42) Tc (43) Ru (44) Rh (45) Pd (46) Ag (47)
3rd series La (57) Hf (72) Ta (73) W (74) Re (75) Os (76) Ir (77) Pt (78) Au (79)


Exceptions to the definition

Although the atoms copper (Cu), silver (Ag), and gold (Au) have a filled d sub-shell—as Table II shows they have the configuration (nd)10(n+1)s1, with n = 3, 4, and 5, respectively—after ionization (loss of two or more electrons) their cations have an incomplete d sub-shell. Since these cations appear in many complexes, copper, silver, and gold are usually seen as transition elements.

II. Electron Configurations

Z Symbol Element Core Configuration
21Sc Scandium  [Ar](3d)1 (4s)2
22Ti Titanium  [Ar](3d)2 (4s)2
23V Vanadium  [Ar](3d)3 (4s)2
24Cr Chromium  [Ar](3d)5 (4s)1
25Mn Manganese  [Ar](3d)5 (4s)2
26Fe Iron  [Ar](3d)6 (4s)2
27Co Cobalt  [Ar](3d)7 (4s)2
28Ni Nickel  [Ar](3d)8 (4s)2
29Cu Copper  [Ar](3d)10(4s)1
39Y Yttrium  [Kr](4d)1 (5s)2
40Zr Zirconium  [Kr](4d)2 (5s)2
41Nb Niobium  [Kr](4d)4 (5s)1
42Mo Molybdenum [Kr](4d)5 (5s)1
43Tc Technetium [Kr](4d)5 (5s)2
44Ru Ruthenium  [Kr](4d)7 (5s)1
45Rh Rhodium  [Kr](4d)8 (5s)1
46Pd Palladium  [Kr](4d)10
47Ag Silver  [Kr](4d)10(5s)1
57La Lanthanum  [Xe](5d)1 (6s)2
72Hf Hafnium [Xe*](5d)2 (6s)2
73Ta Tantalum [Xe*](5d)3 (6s)2
74W Tungsten [Xe*](5d)4 (6s)2
75Re Rhenium [Xe*](5d)5 (6s)2
76Os Osmium [Xe*](5d)6 (6s)2
77Ir Iridium [Xe*](5d)7 (6s)2
78Pt Platinum [Xe*](5d)9 (6s)1
79Au Gold [Xe*](5d)10(6s)1
[Ar] stands for:   (1s)2(2s)2(2p)6 (3s)2(3p)6 [18]
[Kr] stands for:   [Ar](3d)10(4s)2(4p)6

[36]

[Xe] stands for:   [Kr](4d)10(5s)2(5p)6

[54]

[Xe*] stands for:   [Xe](4f)14 [68]

In the past, the group 12 elements zinc (Zn), cadmium (Cd), and mercury (Hg), that are included in the "d-block" of the periodic table, have been considered as transition elements, but they are nowadays rarely considered as such, because their compounds lack some of the properties that are characteristic for transition elements.

Because scandium (Sc), yttrium (Y), and lanthanum (La) actually do not form compounds analogous to those of the other transition elements and because their chemistry is quite homologous to that of the lanthanoids (previously known as lanthanides), they are often excluded from the group of transition elements. A strict application of the definition would describe also lutetium (Lu) as a transition element as it has a singly occupied 5d orbital in its ground state. According to IUPAC[2] lutetium is a lanthanoid. It appears most commonly as a positive ion without d-electrons in the valence shell and without the characteristic properties of a transition element.

Properties

The most striking similarities shared by the transition elements is that they are all metals—which is why they are often called transition metals—and that most of them are hard, strong, and lustrous. They have high melting and boiling points, and, being metals, are good conductors of heat and electricity. Many of the elements are technologically important: iron, nickel, cobalt, titanium, platinum, and others are used in heterogeneous catalysis. They accelerate chemical reactions in which organic molecules are isomerized, built up from simple molecules, oxidized, hydrogenated, or polymerized. Much of the current research on the chemistry of transition element complexes is instigated by their industrial importance as catalysts.

Several of the metals and their compounds are ferromagnetic. Ferromagnetism is a collective effect that appears in the solid state and is due to the aligning of the unpaired electron spins of the metal ions. At low temperature several compounds, notably the oxides MnO, FeO, CoO, and NiO, make a phase transition to antiferromagnetic form.

The transition elements form many useful alloys, among themselves and with other metallic elements. Most of the transition elements can be dissolved in water and other polar solvents by the action of acids and form complexes in solution, although the "noble" metals platinum, silver, and gold are difficult to dissolve by non-oxidizing acids. For obvious reasons the elements copper, silver, and gold are referred to as coinage metals[3]. Note that copper belongs to the class of coinage metals, but is not a noble metal.

Several transition elements are important to the chemistry of living systems, the most familiar examples being iron, cobalt, copper, and molybdenum. Iron is by far the most widespread and important transition metal that has a function in living systems; proteins containing iron participate in two main processes, oxygen transport and electron transfer (i.e., oxidation–reduction) reactions. There are also a number of substances that act to store and transport iron itself.

Ionic bonding

The outer s-electrons of the transition metals are easily lost to the bonding partners (the ligands) of the metal. Also one or more d-electrons of the metal are usually lost to its ligands. In other words, most transition element compounds show ionic chemical bonds. Common ligands are: oxide (O2−), halides (F, Cl, Br, I), hydrates (H2O, OH), cyanide (CN), and sulfate (SO42−). Ligands are either negative ions, such as Cl or neutral molecules with one or more free electron pairs, such as water.

The formal charge of the ionically bound element is known as its oxidation number, or oxidation state. Table III shows the most common oxidation states of the first transition series.[4] Note in this table that the elements exhibit variable oxidation states. The chemistry of the transition series is mainly that of the ions in one of their several oxidation states, and not that of the elemental form itself.

For example, the transition element chromium (Cr) in the ionic water complex chromium hexahydrate, Cr(H2O)63+, is trivalent and is denoted by the oxidation state Cr(III). (This is because water has formal oxidation number zero.) This very commonly occurring triply charged cation has electronic structure [Ar](3d)3; it appears for example also in the crystal KCr(SO4)2⋅(H2O)12. The chromium in Cr(CN)64− is divalent, denoted by Cr(II); it has electronic structure [Ar](3d)4. Chromate [CrO4]2− contains Cr(VI), which is isoelectronic with argon. An example of monovalent Cr(I) is in the bright-green compound K3[Cr(CN)5NO]⋅H2O, which contains K+, Cr+, NO+, and CN.

This widely applied classification of transition elements by their oxidation states is not supported by quantum mechanical calculations. Although many theoretical discussions of transition metal complexes assume (often implicitly) ionic bonds, quantum mechanical calculations show that most of the bonds have a good deal of covalent character. This means that transition metal atomic orbitals are mixed (combined linearly) with orbitals on the ligands, thus forming molecular orbitals. Calculations bear out that transfer of more than one full electron to the ligands occurs rarely, let alone six electrons as in Cr(VI). However, in qualitative and semi-quantitative studies, the assumption of ionic bonds with a transition metal cation provides much insight and yields a systematization of the properties of the transition metal complexes. The covalent character of the bonds is then accounted for by adjustment of the values of the semi-empirical parameters that enter such studies.


III. Oxidation states of first series

Red entries: Most common occurrence.
Blue entries: common occurrence.

Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu
      I(d5 )         I(d10)
II(d1 ) II(d2 ) II(d3 ) II(d4 ) II(d5 ) II(d6 ) II(d7 ) II(d8 ) II(d9 )
III(d0 ) III(d1 ) III(d2 ) III(d3 ) III(d4 ) III(d5 ) III(d6 ) III(d7 ) III(d8 )
  IV(d0) IV(d1) IV(d2 ) IV(d3 ) IV(d4 ) IV(d5 ) IV(d6 )
    V(d0 ) V(d1 ) V(d2 ) V(d3 ) V(d4 )    
      VI(d0 ) VI(d1 ) VI(d2 )      
        VII(d0 )        

Abundance of the transition elements

Iron is the most common transition element in the Earth's solid crust. It takes fourth place among the elements and is the second metal in the crust after aluminium. The elements titanium, manganese, zirconium, vanadium, and chromium are abundant and appear in concentrations larger than 100 grams per ton. Some of the most important and useful transition elements are rare, for instance, tungsten, platinum, gold, and silver. Obviously they are among the most expensive of the transition metals.

In antiquity the elements iron (ferrum), copper (cuprum), silver (argentum), and gold (aurum) were already widely known. The other regular transition elements were recognized as elements from the early 18th century onward when analytic chemistry techniques were refined. Rhenium (Z = 75) was the latest transition metal discovered in nature; it was detected in 1925 in platinum ores and in the niobium mineral columbite. The element is extremely rare, no concentrated ores have been found thus far.

The element technetium (Z = 43) is man-made, it was first made in 1937 by bombarding molybdenum with deuterons, and has so far not been found in nature. All isotopes of technetium are radioactive, although the half-lifes of three of the common isotopes are long (Tc-97: 2.6×106, Tc-98: 4.2×106, and Tc-99: 210 000 years). The Tc isotopes can be isolated in considerable quantities from the fission products of nuclear reactors.

Theory

See Crystal field theory

In general, the relative magnitudes of d orbital splittings for a given ion with different ligands is determined by the ligands. This ordering of ligands according to their ability to split the energies of the d orbitals is called the spectrochemical series. From weakest to strongest the splittings are: I < Br < Cl < OH < F < H2O < pyridine < NH3 < ethylenediamine < CN.

Reference

  1. NIST Ground levels and ionization energies for the neutral atoms Retrieved October 1, 2009
  2. IUPAC Provisional Recommendations for the Nomenclature of Inorganic Chemistry (online draft of an updated version of the "Red Book" IR 3-6), 2004. Retrieved on 17/9/2009.
  3. B. H. Lipshutz and Y. Yamamoto. Introduction, Special issue of Chemical Reviews on Coinage Metals in Organic Synthesis, 2008, vol. 108, pp. 2793–2795 DOI
  4. B. Hathaway, An alternative approach to the teaching of systematic transition metal chemistry, Journal of Chemical Education, vol. 56, pp. 390–392 (1979)