βοΈ Transition Metals: The d-Block Elements
Complete Guide - Variable Oxidation States, Complex Chemistry & Exam Tips (JEE, NEET, Boards)
Transition metals are d-block elements that occupy the middle of the periodic table (Groups 3-12). They are characterized by partially filled d-orbitals (dΒΉ to dΒΉβ° configuration) in their valence or penultimate shell. Unlike main group elements with fixed oxidation states, transition metals exhibit multiple variable oxidation states (from +1 to +8, sometimes even -1 or -2!). This versatility makes them crucial in catalysis, complex formation, and industrial processes. The d-block includes iron (most important metal), copper (excellent conductor), chromium (hard and shiny), and many other industrially significant elements.
π Important Transition Metals (3d Series)
| Element | Symbol | Atomic # | Electron Config | Common Oxidation States |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scandium | Sc | 21 | [Ar] 3dΒΉ 4sΒ² | +3 (almost always) |
| Titanium | Ti | 22 | [Ar] 3dΒ² 4sΒ² | +2, +3, +4 (main: +4) |
| Vanadium | V | 23 | [Ar] 3dΒ³ 4sΒ² | +2, +3, +4, +5 (main: +5) |
| Chromium | Cr | 24 | [Ar] 3dβ΅ 4sΒΉ (anomaly!) | +2, +3, +6 (main: +3, +6) |
| Manganese | Mn | 25 | [Ar] 3dβ΅ 4sΒ² | +2, +3, +4, +6, +7 |
| Iron | Fe | 26 | [Ar] 3dβΆ 4sΒ² | +2, +3, +6 (main: +2, +3) |
| Cobalt | Co | 27 | [Ar] 3dβ· 4sΒ² | +2, +3 (main: +2, +3) |
| Nickel | Ni | 28 | [Ar] 3dβΈ 4sΒ² | +2, +3, +4 |
| Copper | Cu | 29 | [Ar] 3dΒΉβ° 4sΒΉ (anomaly!) | +1, +2, +3 (main: +2) |
| Zinc | Zn | 30 | [Ar] 3dΒΉβ° 4sΒ² | +2 (always) |
βοΈ Characteristic Properties of Transition Metals
π― Physical Properties
- π¨ Hard and strong metals: d-electrons contribute to metallic bonding, making them harder than alkali/alkaline earth metals
- π« High melting & boiling points: Much higher than main group metals (Fe: 1538Β°C, W: 3422Β°C - highest of all metals!)
- β‘ Good electrical and thermal conductivity: d-electrons participate in conduction
- π¨ Colored compounds: Many transition metal ions are colored (CuΒ²βΊ blue, CrΒ³βΊ green, MnOββ» purple) due to d-d electronic transitions
- π§² Magnetic properties: Many show paramagnetism or ferromagnetism (Fe is ferromagnetic!)
- π Complex formation: Form coordination complexes with ligands (NHβ, CNβ», HβO, etc.)
π¬ Chemical Properties
π¨ Anomalies in Transition Metals
- Chromium (Cr): [Ar] 3dβ΅ 4sΒΉ - NOT [Ar] 3dβ΄ 4sΒ² (half-filled d stability preferred!)
- Copper (Cu): [Ar] 3dΒΉβ° 4sΒΉ - NOT [Ar] 3dβΉ 4sΒ² (filled d stability + lower 4s energy)
- Iron not magnetic at high temp: Loses ferromagnetism above Curie temperature (770Β°C)
- Zinc is NOT truly transition: ZnΒ²βΊ has dΒΉβ° (filled d), so it's sometimes considered post-transition
βοΈ Variable Oxidation States of Transition Metals
π’ Why Multiple Oxidation States?
- d-orbitals energy: ns and (n-1)d orbitals have similar energies - both can be involved in bonding
- Electrons lost sequentially: Can lose 4s electrons first, THEN 3d electrons
- Stability of certain configurations: dβ΅ (half-filled) and dΒΉβ° (filled) are particularly stable
- Ligand field effects: Ligands can stabilize specific oxidation states
- Ionic size effects: Higher oxidation states favor smaller ions
π Common Oxidation States (3d Series)
- Sc: +3 only (loses all 4s & 3dΒΉ electrons)
- Ti: +2, +3, +4 (loses 4s & varying 3d electrons)
- V: +2, +3, +4, +5 (versatile! all can occur)
- Cr: +2, +3, +6 (skip +4, +5 due to dβ΅ stability)
- Mn: +2, +3, +4, +6, +7 (all single-digit states!)
- Fe: +2, +3 (main), +6 (rare in FeOβΒ²β»)
- Co: +2, +3 (main), +4, +5 (rare)
- Ni: +2 (main), +3, +4 (rare)
- Cu: +1, +2 (main, +2 is most common in aqueous)
- Zn: +2 always (dΒΉβ° filled, no redox)
β‘ Redox Behavior & Most Stable States
- Mnβ·βΊ: Strongest oxidizing agent (MnOββ», purple color) among d-block
- CrβΆβΊ: Strong oxidizer (CrβOβΒ²β» orange, CrOβΒ²β» yellow)
- MnΒ²βΊ: Stable, pale pink (MnΒ³βΊ and higher are strong oxidizers)
- FeΒ³βΊ vs FeΒ²βΊ: Both stable; FeΒ³βΊ slightly more stable (half-filled dβ΅ preference shown in some reactions)
- CuΒ²βΊ vs CuβΊ: CuΒ²βΊ more stable in aqueous (CuβΊ disproportionates: 2CuβΊ β CuΒ²βΊ + Cu)
π Periodic Trends in Transition Metals
π Atomic & Ionic Radius
Decreases slightly β then increases slightly
Sc > Ti β V β Cr β Mn β Fe β Co β Ni > Zn > Cu
Why: As d-electrons fill, nuclear charge increases BUT they shield each other β weak decrease. Exception: Zn (137 pm) > Cu (128 pm) because full dΒΉβ° subshell has electron-electron repulsion, expanding electron cloud
β‘ Ionization Energy
Increases gradually across period
Sc < Ti < V < Cr (dip!) < Mn < Fe < Co < Ni < Cu < Zn
Why: Generally increases due to nuclear charge, BUT half-filled (Cr, Mn) shows anomalies. Zn (906 kJ/mol, dΒΉβ°4sΒ²) >> Cu (745 kJ/mol) because Zn's full dΒΉβ° and full sΒ² subshells are highly stable
π Metallic Character
HIGH (all are metals)
All transition metals show metallic bonding via d-electrons
Why: d-electrons delocalized β metallic lattice bonding throughout block
π§² Magnetic Properties
Depends on d-configuration
Sc (no, 3dΒΉ) < Ti (weak) < V, Cr, Mn (paramagnetic) < Fe (ferromagnetic!) < Co (ferromagnetic) < Ni (ferromagnetic) > Cu (diamagnetic, dΒΉβ°)
Why: Depends on unpaired d-electrons. Fe, Co, Ni show ferromagnetism (aligned spins)
π¨ Colored Ions
Colorless β Various colors β Colorless
ScΒ³βΊ (colorless) β TiΒ³βΊ (purple) β VΒ³βΊ (green) β CrΒ³βΊ (green) β MnΒ²βΊ (pale pink) β FeΒ³βΊ (brown) β CuΒ²βΊ (blue) β ZnΒ²βΊ (colorless)
Why: d-d transitions. Colorless when dβ° (ScΒ³βΊ) or dΒΉβ° (CuβΊ, ZnΒ²βΊ)
π₯ Reactivity Trends
Generally DECREASES across period (opposite to main groups!)
Sc most reactive β Fe, Co, Ni similar β Zn more reactive β Cu least (EΒ°=+0.34V; only metal that cannot displace Hβ)
Why: Transition metals much less reactive than alkali metals but more interesting chemically
𧬠Detailed Element Profiles
Sc Scandium (Atomic # 21)
- Config: [Ar] 3dΒΉ 4sΒ² | Mass: 44.96 g/mol
- Oxidation states: +3 only (always loses ALL electrons to form ScΒ³βΊ, no other state stable)
- Ion color: ScΒ³βΊ colorless (no d-electrons for transitions)
- Chemistry: Very similar to AlΒ³βΊ (diagonal relationship!) - amphoteric hydroxide
- Rarity: Scattered in trace amounts, rarely concentrated (hard to extract)
- Uses: Scandium-aluminum alloys (aerospace), high-intensity lamps (Sc iodide)
- Exam note: Often forgotten! Lowest d-count, always +3
Ti Titanium (Atomic # 22)
- Config: [Ar] 3dΒ² 4sΒ² | Mass: 47.87 g/mol
- Main oxidation state: +4 (TiOβ - most common) but +2, +3 also form
- Industrial giant: Second most abundant transition metal in Earth's crust!
- TiOβ (Titanium Dioxide): White pigment in paints, food additive (E171), UV absorber
- Alloys: Ti alloys (with Al, V) ultra-strong, lightweight (aerospace gold standard!)
- Biocompatibility: Ti and Ti alloys used in surgical implants, bone screws
- Color: TiΒ³βΊ purple, TiΒ²βΊ colorless (no d or single d)
V Vanadium (Atomic # 23)
- Config: [Ar] 3dΒ³ 4sΒ² | Mass: 50.94 g/mol
- Polyvalent champion: Shows ALL common oxidation states: +2 (purple), +3 (green), +4 (blue), +5 (yellow)
- Vanadium compounds: VOβΊ (+4, blue-ish), VOββΊ (+5, yellow), VβOβ (red, catalytic)
- Industrial importance: VβOβ catalyst in Contact process (HβSOβ production)
- Alloys: Steel alloys with V improve hardness, strength, corrosion resistance
- Biological: Some evidence V compounds show insulin-mimetic activity
- Color changes: Unique color for EACH oxidation state - classic exam demonstration!
Cr Chromium (Atomic # 24)
- Config: [Ar] 3dβ΅ 4sΒΉ (ANOMALY!) | Mass: 51.996 g/mol
- Anomalous config: Half-filled dβ΅ is more stable than dβ΄4sΒ² β unusual electron arrangement
- Key oxidation states: +3 (green, stable), +6 (yellow CrOβΒ²β», orange CrβOβΒ²β», strong oxidizer)
- Chromium plating: Mirror finish on metals (electroplating with Cr coating)
- Dichromate/chromate: CrβOβΒ²β» vs CrOβΒ²β» interconversion depends on pH (diprotic equilibrium, exam favorite!)
- Redox potentials: CrΒ³βΊ β CrβΆβΊ very strong oxidizers
- Toxicity: CrβΆβΊ suspected carcinogen! CrΒ³βΊ less toxic. Environmental concern in plating waste
Mn Manganese (Atomic # 25)
- Config: [Ar] 3dβ΅ 4sΒ² | Mass: 54.94 g/mol
- Most versatile: Shows EVERY oxidation state from +2 to +7!
- MnOββ» (permanganate): Purple, most powerful d-block oxidizing agent! Strongest oxidizer in acidic solution
- MnΒ²βΊ: Pale pink (stable in neutral/basic), used as indicator in titrations
- MnΒ³βΊ, Mnβ΄βΊ: Strong oxidizers, unstable in aqueous (disproportionate)
- Biological importance: MnΒ²βΊ cofactor in enzymes (photosynthesis, catalase)
- Industrial: Pyrolusite (MnOβ) ore - lab preparation of Clβ, oxidizing agent in wet cells
Fe Iron (Atomic # 26)
- Config: [Ar] 3dβΆ 4sΒ² | Mass: 55.845 g/mol
- Most important metal: Fe accounts for 90% of all metal use! Steel = Fe + C + other elements
- Oxidation states: +2 (FeΒ²βΊ, pale green, ferrous) and +3 (FeΒ³βΊ, brown, ferric), rarely +6
- Ferromagnetism: Fe, Co, Ni are ferromagnetic - only metals showing persistent magnetism!
- Curie point: Fe loses ferromagnetism above 770Β°C (becomes paramagnetic)
- Biological: FeΒ²βΊ in hemoglobin (oxygen transport), FeΒ³βΊ in ferritin (iron storage), FeΒ²βΊ in many enzymes
- Complex chemistry: Fe forms numerous complexes, many of which are color indicators
Co Cobalt (Atomic # 27)
- Config: [Ar] 3dβ· 4sΒ² | Mass: 58.933 g/mol
- Oxidation states: +2 (pale pink, most common), +3 (forms stable complexes), rarely +4, +5
- Ferromagnetism: Co is ferromagnetic! Used in permanent magnets
- Biological: CoΒ²βΊ center in Vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin) - essential for methylation reactions
- CoClβ color test: Anhydrous CoClβ is blue desiccant indicator; hydrated turns pink (water uptake)
- Industrial: Cobalt alloys, catalysts for petroleum, magnetic materials
- CoΒ³βΊ complexes: Stable: [Co(NHβ)β]Β³βΊ and other octahedral complexes common in coordination chemistry
Ni Nickel (Atomic # 28)
- Config: [Ar] 3dβΈ 4sΒ² | Mass: 58.693 g/mol
- Oxidation states: +2 (main), +3, +4 (rare oxidizing conditions)
- Ferromagnetism: Ni is ferromagnetic! Used in magnetic alloys
- Coinage metal: Ni used in coins (nickel-copper alloys, "nickel" US 5-cent piece is actually 75% Cu + 25% Ni!)
- Catalyst: Ni is excellent heterogeneous catalyst (hydrogenation of oils, methanation of CO)
- Alloys: Nickel-iron for structural steel, nickel-titanium (nitinol) for shape-memory alloys
- Toxicity concern: Ni compounds (dust, fumes) potential carcinogen - occupational hazard
Cu Copper (Atomic # 29)
- Config: [Ar] 3dΒΉβ° 4sΒΉ (ANOMALY!) | Mass: 63.546 g/mol
- Anomalous config: Filled dΒΉβ° is more stable than dβΉ4sΒ² β prefers 4sΒΉ + dΒΉβ°
- Oxidation states: +1 (CuβΊ, colorless, forms [Cu(NHβ)β]βΊ), +2 (CuΒ²βΊ, blue, main), +3 (rare)
- CuβΊ disproportionation: 2CuβΊ β CuΒ²βΊ + Cu (in aqueous solution - CuβΊ unstable!)
- Coinage & electrical: Pure Cu is reddish, excellent conductor (electrical wiring gold standard!)
- Biological: CuΒ²βΊ cofactor in hemocyanin (blood Oβ carrier in arthropods), in many oxidases
- Complex coordination: CuΒ²βΊ forms beautiful blue complexes, square planar geometry common
Zn Zinc (Atomic # 30)
- Config: [Ar] 3dΒΉβ° 4sΒ² | Mass: 65.38 g/mol
- Oxidation state: +2 ALWAYS (no redox chemistry - filled dΒΉβ° very stable!)
- Non-transition classification: Often considered post-transition metal (ZnΒ²βΊ has no d-electrons for color or magnetism)
- Biological cornerstone: ZnΒ²βΊ most abundant metal ion in cells! Cofactor for 300+ enzymes
- Dietary essential: Immunity, wound healing, protein synthesis - deficiency β growth stunting, immune compromise
- Industrial: Galvanization (Zn coating protects steel from rust), brass (Cu-Zn alloy), die-casting
- ZnΒ²βΊ color: Colorless (no d-d transitions possible with dΒΉβ°)
π§ͺ Important Transition Metal Compounds
β« Iron Compounds
- FeSOβ - Iron(II) sulfate (pale green, lab reagent)
- Feβ(SOβ)β - Iron(III) sulfate (brown precipitate with base)
- FeClβ - Iron(III) chloride (strong Lewis acid cataly)
- FeOΒ·nHβO - Ferrous salts (bright colors, indicator)
- Kβ[Fe(CN)β] - Potassium ferricyanide (red/yellow salt, oxidizing agent)
π΅ Copper Compounds
- CuSOβ - Blue vitriol (fungicide, aqueous is bright blue)
- CuO - Black copper oxide (oxidizer, catalyst)
- Cu(NOβ)β - Blue solution (lab oxidizer)
- [Cu(NHβ)β]Β²βΊ - Deep blue complex (formed with aqueous ammonia; Schweizer's reagent for dissolving cellulose, NOT Fehling's test)
- CuFeSβ - Chalcopyrite ore (primary copper source)
π‘ Chromium Compounds
- KβCrβOβ - Orange dichromate (strong oxidizer, standard lab reagent)
- KβCrOβ - Yellow chromate (pH >8)
- Crβ(SOβ)β - Green chromium(III) salt
- CrOβ - Chromium trioxide (red oxidizer, toxic!)
- Cr(OH)β - Green amphoteric hydroxide
π£ Manganese Compounds
- KMnOβ - Purple permanganate (strongest d-block oxidizer!)
- KβMnOβ - Green manganate (less stable than permanganate)
- MnOβ - Black manganese dioxide (catalyst, Clβ lab prep)
- MnSOβ - Pale pink MnΒ²βΊ (indicator)
- Mn(OH)β - Colorless β brown with air (oxidation of MnΒ²βΊ)
π Coordination Complexes & Complex Formation
βοΈ What are Coordination Complexes?
- Definition: Central metal ion surrounded by ligands (Lewis bases) bonded through coordinate covalent bonds
- General formula: [M(L)β]^(q+/-) where M = metal, L = ligand, n = coordination number
- Coordination number: Usually 4 (tetrahedral) or 6 (octahedral), rarely 2, 3, 5, 8
- Ligands: Monodentate (NHβ, HβO, CNβ», Clβ»), bidentate (EDTA, ethylene diamine), polydentate
- Naming: Complex ions written in brackets with charge, ligands named with prefixes
π΅ Common Transition Metal Complexes
- [Fe(CN)β]β΄β»: Hexacyanoferrate(II) - deep red, very stable (used in Prussian blue)
- [Fe(HβO)β]Β²βΊ: Hexaaquairon(II) - pale green in solution
- [Cu(NHβ)β]Β²βΊ: Tetramminecopper(II) - deep blue, forms with excess aqueous ammonia (NOT Fehling's test - Fehling's uses tartrate ions)
- Fehling's Reagent: CuΒ²βΊ complex with tartrate ions (Rochelle salt) - reduces aldehydes to CuβO (brick-red precipitate)
- [Cr(HβO)β]Β³βΊ: Hexaaquachromium(III) - green/violet depending on isomer
- [MnOβ]β»: Permanganate - purple/violet, intense color from charge transfer
π¨ Color in Transition Metal Complexes
- Crystal field theory: d-orbitals split into two energy levels (d-d transitions)
- d-d electronic transitions: Absorption of visible light causes electron excitement between d-levels
- Color complementarity: Absorbed color's complement is what we see
- Examples: [Cu(NHβ)β]Β²βΊ blue (absorbs orange), [Cr(HβO)β]Β³βΊ green (absorbs red)
- Colorless complexes: dβ° (no d-electrons), dΒΉβ° (filled d), or very large ligand field splitting
- Exam fact: Color = evidence of d-electrons AND d-orbital splitting!
βοΈ Stability & Chelation Effect
- Stability constant (Kf): Higher Kf = more stable complex
- Chelate vs monodentate: Bidentate/polydentate ligands (chelates) form much more stable complexes
- Chelation effect: Entropic advantage: one multidentate ligand replaces many monodentate ones
- EDTA: Hexadentate chelator - binds and removes heavy metals (medical use!)
- Hardness-softness: Soft metals (CuβΊ) prefer soft ligands (CNβ», SΒ²β»); hard metals (FeΒ³βΊ) prefer hard ligands (OHβ», Fβ»)
- Exam topics: Complex stability, substitution reactions, chelation in medicine
π Industrial Applications & Uses
π¨ Iron & Steel (Most Important!)
- Steel production: World's most important material (~1.9 billion tons/year!)
- Iron-carbon alloys: Pure Fe + C (0.1-2%) = steel; soft to hard depending on C%
- Stainless steel: Fe + Cr (18%) + Ni (8%+) = corrosion resistant, kitchen appliances
- Cast iron: Fe + C (2-6%) + Si = brittle, cookware
- Iron extraction: Blast furnace: FeβOβ + CO β Fe + COβ (Haber process analog)
- Rusting prevention: Galvanization (Zn coating), chromium plating
β‘ Catalysts (Chemical Industry)
- Iron catalysts: Haber process (Nβ + Hβ β NHβ), crucial for fertilizer production
- Vanadium catalyst: VβOβ in Contact process (SOβ + Oβ β SOβ for HβSOβ)
- Manganese/Copper catalysts: Oxidation reactions, polymerization
- Catalytic converters: Pt-Pd-Rh in vehicles (oxidize CO, reduce NOβ)
- Enzyme mimics: Metal complexes mimic biological enzymes
π Electrical & Thermal Conductors
- Copper wiring: Highest electrical conductivity of all metals (except Ag)
- Copper pipes: Plumbing - durable, corrosion resistant
- Electromagnets: Iron/cobalt/nickel core for strong magnetic fields
- Transformers: Iron cores for efficient power transmission
- Heat sinks: Cu & Al (not d-block, but relevant) for cooling electronics
π§ͺ Laboratory & Analytical
- Titration reagents: KMnOβ (standard oxidizer), KβCrβOβ (dichromate)
- Color reagents: CuSOβ (Fehling's), FeClβ (phenol test)
- Precipitation tests: AgNOβ for halides, KβCrOβ for detection
- Drying agents: CaClβ (not d-block), some Mn compounds
π₯ Medical & Biological
- Iron supplements: FeΒ²βΊ for anemia treatment (hemoglobin formation)
- Copper IUD: Contraceptive device - copper ions toxic to sperm
- Chelation therapy: EDTA complexes remove heavy metals (Pb, Hg) from body
- MRI contrast agents: GdΒ³βΊ chelates (not d-block, but related principle)
- Enzymes: Metal-dependent: Fe (cytochromes), Cu (oxidases), Zn (hundreds!)
π¨ Pigments & Coatings
- Iron oxides: Yellow (FeOOH), red (FeβOβ), black (FeβOβ) pigments
- Chromium colors: Chromium oxide green (CrβOβ), dichromate yellow
- Prussian blue: Feβ΄[Fe(CN)β]β - famous blue pigment & medical antidote!
- Metal coatings: Chrome plating (shiny finish), nickel plating (corrosion resistant)
π Exam Preparation Tips
π― JEE Focus
- Variable oxidation states: Master all possible states for Cr (+2, +3, +6), Mn (+2-+7), Fe (+2, +3, +6)
- Color of ions: d-d transitions explain colors; memorize colors of common ions
- Redox reactions: MnOββ» vs CrβOβΒ²β» in acidic/basic solutions - 1/5 vs 1/6 electron transfer
- Complex geometry: Determine coordination number & geometry (octahedral, square planar, tetrahedral)
- Anomalous configurations: Cr ([Ar] 3dβ΅ 4sΒΉ), Cu ([Ar] 3dΒΉβ° 4sΒΉ) - WHY?
- Chelation effect: Chelates more stable than simple ligands (entropy!)
- Magnetic properties: Paramagnetic (FeΒ²βΊ, dβΆ high spin) vs diamagnetic (dΒΉβ°, ZnΒ²βΊ)
𧬠NEET Focus
- Iron biology: FeΒ²βΊ center in hemoglobin (oxygen transport) & myoglobin (oxygen storage)
- Zinc essentiality: Cofactor in 300+ enzymes (immunity, DNA, protein synthesis)
- Copper biology: Oxidases, cytochromes, hemocyanin in arthropods
- Vitamin B12: Cobalt center (CoΒ³βΊ) in cyanocobalamin - methylation reactions
- Manganese: Photosystem II (water splitting in photosynthesis requires Mnβ΄βΊ cluster)
- Toxicity: Heavy metal toxicity (Pb, Hg) - EDTA chelation therapy
- Color indicators: [Fe(CN)β]β΄β» deep red (complexation), [Cu(NHβ)β]Β²βΊ blue (coordination)
π Board Exam Focus
- Definition: Transition metals = partially filled d-orbitals in valence/penultimate shell
- Key properties: Hard, high melting points, metallic, colored ions from d-d transitions
- Variable oxidation states: Multiple states due to d & s orbitals similar energy
- Common reactions: Redox reactions prominent (especially with permanganate & dichromate)
- Coordination complexes: Central metal + ligands; coordination number commonly 4 & 6
- Industrial importance: Steel production (#1), catalysts, conductors
- Exam demonstrations: Color changes in redox (MnOββ» purple β colorless), complex formation (CuΒ²βΊ + NHβ β [Cu(NHβ)β]Β²βΊ blue)