Chemistry XII · Chemistry of Transition Elements · Lecture Lecture · § 1 / 8
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Class XII · Chemistry · Transition Elements · Lecture

Chemistry of Transition Elements

The full, readable lecture — the d-block and its 3d configuration, variable oxidation states, the colours of their ions, paramagnetism, catalysis, complexes and alloys. As you scroll, the panel on the right shows each idea through a real object you already know: a gemstone, a wardrobe, a bicycle chain, a magnet, a bottle of blue solution. In the first scene, slide the d-orbital gap and switch a sapphire to a ruby yourself.

The most beautiful fact about transition metals is that their ions are coloured. A ruby, a sapphire and an emerald are all the same idea: a transition-metal ion sitting in a crystal, splitting white light. When ligands surround the ion they split its five d-orbitals into two levels separated by a small gap, Δ. The ion absorbs the colour of light whose energy equals Δ, promoting an electron across the gap — a d-d transition — and the light that passes through is the complementary colour you see.

d-d transitionligands split the d-orbitals by Δ · electron absorbs hν = Δ · colour seen = complement of light absorbed

Sc³⁺ (3d⁰, empty) and Zn²⁺ (3d¹⁰, full) cannot make a d-d transition — one has no electron to promote, the other has no empty level to promote into — so they are colourless. Move the slider on the right to change Δ and watch the same gemstone shift from ruby red to emerald green to sapphire blue.

Real world: the red of a ruby and the green of an emerald both come from d-d transitions of trace Cr³⁺ ions trapped inside the crystal.

A transition metal is like a person with a wardrobe of outfits: one element, many oxidation states, each its own colour. This happens because the 3d and 4s electrons sit very close in energy, so both sets are available for bonding — different numbers of electrons can be lost with little energy difference.

MetalCommon oxidation statesExample species
Mn+2, +3, +4, +6, +7Mn²⁺ (pink) … MnO₄⁻ (+7, purple)
Fe+2, +3Fe²⁺ (green), Fe³⁺ (yellow-brown)
Cr+2, +3, +6Cr³⁺ (green), Cr₂O₇²⁻ (+6, orange)

Manganese shows the widest range, +2 pale pink up to +7 in the deep-purple permanganate ion (MnO₄⁻). Sc wears only +3 and Zn only +2 — they have the smallest wardrobes, so they are the least "transition-like" of the series.

The defining feature is a partly filled d-subshell. The 3d (first transition) series runs Sc → Zn (Z = 21–30), Groups 3–12, between the s-block and the p-block. The general valence configuration is (n−1)d¹⁻¹⁰ ns¹⁻²; electrons fill 4s first, then the five 3d orbitals one at a time. There are two famous anomalies:

The two anomaliesCr = [Ar] 3d⁵ 4s¹ (half-filled d⁵)
Cu = [Ar] 3d¹⁰ 4s¹ (completely-filled d¹⁰)

A half-filled (d⁵) or completely-filled (d¹⁰) d-set is unusually stable (extra exchange energy and a symmetrical charge cloud), so one 4s electron slips across into 3d.

Ionisation note: although 4s fills first, on forming ions the 4s electrons leave first — so Fe²⁺ is [Ar] 3d⁶, not 3d⁴ 4s².
  • Paramagnetic — pulled into a magnetic field, caused by unpaired electrons.
  • Diamagnetic — weakly pushed out; happens when all electrons are paired.

Most transition-metal ions have unpaired d-electrons, so a magnet picks them up. The more unpaired electrons, the stronger the pull. The magnetic moment is estimated by the spin-only formula:

Spin-only momentμ = √[ n(n + 2) ] Bohr magnetons   (n = unpaired electrons)

Mn²⁺ / Fe³⁺ (3d⁵) → n = 5 → μ ≈ 5.92 BM (strongly attracted); Zn²⁺ (3d¹⁰, all paired) → n = 0 → diamagnetic, ignored by the magnet.

Transition metals and their compounds are superb catalysts, for two reasons: their variable oxidation states let them shuttle electrons easily, and their surface adsorbs reactant molecules, weakening bonds and offering a low-energy path. A car's catalytic converter is exactly this surface chemistry, cleaning the exhaust.

ProcessCatalystRole
Haber (NH₃)Feadsorbs N₂ + H₂
Contact (H₂SO₄)V₂O₅SO₂ → SO₃ (V cycles +5⇌+4)
HydrogenationNiadds H₂ across C=C
Real world: the converter under a car uses Pt, Pd and Rh to turn toxic CO and NO into CO₂ and N₂.

Add ammonia to pale-blue copper sulfate and the solution turns a stunning royal blue — a complex has formed. Small, highly charged transition-metal ions with empty d-orbitals readily accept lone pairs from surrounding species.

  • Central metal ion — the transition-metal ion that accepts electron pairs (e.g. Cu²⁺, Fe³⁺).
  • Ligand — a molecule or ion with a lone pair to donate (a Lewis base): NH₃, H₂O, CN⁻, Cl⁻.
  • Coordination number — the number of ligand donor atoms bonded to the central ion (commonly 4 or 6).
Examples[Cu(NH₃)₄]²⁺ — tetraamminecopper(II), deep blue, CN 4
[Fe(CN)₆]⁴⁻ — hexacyanoferrate(II), CN 6
  • Alloy — a solid mixture of a metal with other metals (or carbon). Transition metals alloy readily because their atoms are similar in size, so atoms of one can replace atoms of another in the metallic lattice.

The spoon and fork in your kitchen drawer are stainless steel — iron with chromium swapped in. A door handle or trumpet may be brass — copper with zinc.

AlloyMain metalsUse
Stainless steelFe + Cr (+ Ni)cutlery, sinks, surgical tools — resists rust
BrassCu + Znfittings, instruments
BronzeCu + Snbearings, statues, coins

An old bicycle chain rusting in the rain is the everyday face of variable oxidation states: iron metal gives up electrons to become Fe²⁺ then Fe³⁺, the orange-brown hydrated oxide we call rust. The same iron, kept clean, runs your blood (haemoglobin), your buildings (steel) and a Haber plant (catalyst).

  • Iron → steel; copper → wiring; chromium → plating; Pt/Pd/Rh → converters.
  • Biological: Fe in haemoglobin (carries O₂); Co in vitamin B₁₂.
μ — magnetic moment
Spin-only moment of Mn²⁺ (3d⁵)?
n = 5 → μ = √[5×7] = √35 = 5.92 BM.
  1. Coloured ions & d-d transitions; Sc³⁺ (d⁰) and Zn²⁺ (d¹⁰) colourless.
  2. Variable oxidation states (Mn +2→+7); 3d config & Cr/Cu anomalies.
  3. Paramagnetism, μ = √[n(n+2)]; catalysis (Fe, V₂O₅, Ni).
  4. Complexes, ligands & coordination number; alloys, rusting & uses.
⚛ Live panelChemistry of Transition Elements
Scroll the lecture — this panel shows each concept through a real object as you reach it.