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Chemistry - Coordination Chemistry Question with Solution | TestHub

ChemistryCoordination ChemistryVBT,CFT(complex compound)Medium2 minQB
ChemistryMediumsingle choice
Passage / Comprehension

When a transition metal ion (usually) is involved in octahedral complex formation, the five degenerate d orbitals split into two sets of degenerate orbitals (3 + 2). These are three degenerate orbitals of lower energy (, , ) and a set of degenerate orbitals of higher energy (, ). The orbitals with lower energy are called orbitals, and those with higher energy are called orbitals.

In octahedral complexes, a positive metal ion may be considered to be present at the center and negative ligands at the corners of a regular octahedron. As the lobes of and lie along the axes (i.e., along the ligands), the repulsions are greater, resulting in higher energy. The lobes of the remaining three d-orbitals (, , ) lie between the axes (i.e., between the ligands). The repulsion between them is less, resulting in lower energy. In octahedral complexes, if a metal ion has more than 3 electrons, then for pairing them, the options are:

(i) Pairing may start with the 4ᵗʰ electron in orbitals.

(ii) Pairing may start normally with 6 electrons when and orbitals are singly filled.

Which of the following electronic arrangement is / are possible for inner orbital oct complex.

(i) (ii) (iii) (iv)

Select the CORRECT code:

Options:

Answer:
B
Solution:

inner orbital complex is (octahedral pairing)

should be filled first completely after that electron will go in orbital.

Stream:JEESubject:ChemistryTopic:Coordination ChemistrySubtopic:VBT,CFT(complex compound)
2mℹ️ Source: QB

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