Infrared And Raman Spectra Of Inorganic And Coordination Compounds Part B Applications In Coordination Organometallic May 2026

The binding of ethene to a metal (e.g., in Zeise’s salt, K[PtCl₃(C₂H₄)]) induces two key shifts. First, the ν(C=C) of free ethene at 1623 cm⁻¹ (Raman) drops to approximately 1515 cm⁻¹ in the complex—a direct measure of the population of the ethylene π* orbital via backdonation. Second, a new, weak IR band appears near 1200 cm⁻¹, assigned to the CH₂ wagging mode of the coordinated olefin; this mode is IR-forbidden in free ethene due to its center of inversion, but coordination breaks that symmetry, activating the band. The intensity of this “activation band” is proportional to the degree of metal-to-ligand backdonation and can distinguish between η²-olefin and metallacyclopropane extremes.

One of the most elegant applications of IR spectroscopy in coordination chemistry is the detection of the trans influence via CO probes. Consider the square-planar platinum(II) series ( trans)-([PtCl(CO)(L)_2]^+ ). As L varies from a strong σ-donor (e.g., CH₃⁻) to a weak donor (e.g., Cl⁻), the CO stretching frequency shifts inversely. With L = CH₃, the Pt–CO bond is strengthened (more π-backdonation), lowering ν(CO) to ~2030 cm⁻¹. With L = Cl⁻, ν(CO) rises to ~2080 cm⁻¹. This provides a direct, linear correlation with the trans ligand's Tolman electronic parameter, allowing spectroscopists to rank ligands without ever isolating a pure metal-hydride. The binding of ethene to a metal (e

The CO stretching region (1850–2150 cm⁻¹) remains the most unambiguous probe for predicting carbonyl geometry. A purely terminal, linear M–C≡O group exhibits a strong, sharp IR band typically between 2050 and 2120 cm⁻¹ for neutral carbonyls (e.g., Ni(CO)₄ at 2057 cm⁻¹). Anionic or electron-rich metal centers lower this frequency due to increased π-backdonation into the CO π* orbital. The intensity of this “activation band” is proportional