Hydrogeochemistry - University of Florida College of
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Transcript Hydrogeochemistry - University of Florida College of
Complexes
Complex – Association of a cation and an
anion or neutral molecule
All associated species are dissolved
None remain electrostatically effective
Importance of complexes
Complexing can increase solubility of
minerals if ions involved in reactions are
complexed
Total concentration (SE) = complexed plus
dissolved
Total concentration is higher in solution than
equilibrium with mineral
E.g., Solution at equilibrium with calcite will
have higher SCa2+ if there is also SO42present because of CaSO4o complex
Importance of Complexes
Some elements more common as
complexes
Particularly true of metals
Cu2+, Hg2+, Pb2+, Fe3+, U4+ usually found as
complexes rather than free ions
The chemical behavior depends on
complex, not ion, e.g.:
Mobility
Bioreactivity: Toxicity & bioavialability
Mobility
Adsorption affected by complex
E.g., Hydroxide complexes of uranyl (UO22+)
readily adsorbed by oxide and hydroxide
minerals
OH- and PO4- complexes readily adsorbed
Carbonate, sulfate, fluoride complexes rarely
adsorbed to mineral surfaces
Bioreactivity
Toxicity and bioavailability depends on
complexes
Toxicity – e.g. Cu2+, Cd2+, Zn2+, Ni2+, Hg2+,
Pb2+
Toxicity depends on activity and complexes
not total concentrations
E.g., CH3Hg+ and Cu2+ are toxic to fish
Other complexes, e.g., CuCO3o are not
Bioavailability
Some metals are essential nutrients: Fe,
Mn, Zn, Cu
Their uptake depends on forming complexes
General observations
Complex stability increases with increasing
charge and/or decreasing radius of cation
Space issue – length of interactions
High charge = stronger bond
Strong complexes form minerals with low
solubilities
Corollary – Minerals with high solubilities form
weak complexes
High salinity increases complexing
More ligands in water to complex
High salinity water increases solubility
because of complexing
Complexes – two types
No consistent nomenclature
Outer Sphere complexes (weaker bonds)
Inner Sphere complexes (stronger bonds)
AKA – “ion Pair”
AKA – “coordination compounds”
AKA – “complex” (S&M)
These are ideal end-members – most
complexes intermediate in structure
Outer Sphere Complexes
Associated hydrated (usually) cation and
anion
Held by long range electrostatic forces
Fairly weak complex, but ions still no longer
“electrostatically effective”
Separated by water molecules oriented
around cation
Water separates ions making up complex
Outer Sphere complexes
Association is transient
Not strong enough to displace water
surrounding ion
Typically smaller cations
Na, K - monovalent so weaker bonds
Ca, Mg, Sr - divalent so stronger bonds
Outer Sphere complexes
Also larger ions (Cs & Rb) have low charge
density
Relatively unhydrated
Tend to form “contact complexes” – e.g., no
water separation
Still considered ion pairs, but no intervening
water
Inner Sphere Complexes
More stable than ion pairs
Form with ligands
Ligand – the anion or neutral molecule
that combines with a cation to form a
complex
Can be various species
E.g., H2O, OH-, NH3, Cl-, F-, NH2CH2CH2NH2
Inner Sphere Complexes
Metal and ligands immediately adjacent
Metal cations generally smaller than ligands
Largely covalent bonds between metal ion
and electron-donating ligand
Charge of metal cations exceeds
coordinating ligands
May be one or more coordinating ligands
An Aquocomplex – H2O is ligand
Note – cross section,
actually 3-D sphere
+
Outer sphere – partly
oriented water
Coordinating cation
Inner sphere – completely
oriented water, typically 4
or 6 fold coordination
For ligand other than water to form innersphere complex
Must displace one or more coordinating
waters
Bond usually covalent nature
E.g.:
M(H2O)n + L = ML(H2O)n-1 + H2O
Size and charge important to number of
coordinating ligands:
Commonly metal cations smaller than ligands
Commonly metal cation charge exceed charge
on ligands
These differences mean cations typically
surrounded by several large coordinating
ligands
A good example is the “aquocomplex”
+
Maximum number of ligands depends on
coordination number (CN)
Most common CN are 4 and 6, although 2,
3, 5, 6, 8 and 12 are possible
CN depends on radius ratio (RR):
RR =
Radius Coordinating Cation
Radius Ligand
Maximum number of coordinating ligands
Depends on radius ratio
Generates coordination polyhedron
All coordination sites rarely filled
Only in aquo-cation complexes (hydration
complexes)
Highest number of coordination sites is
typically 3 to 4
The open complexation sites results from
dilute concentration of ligands
Concentrations of solution
Water concentrations – 55.6 moles/kg
Ligand concentrations 0.001 to 0.0001 mol/kg
5 to 6 orders of magnitude lower
Ligands can bond with metals at one or
several sites
Unidentate ligand – contains only one site
E.g., NH3, Cl- F- H2O, OH-
Bidentate
Two sites to bind: oxalate, ethylenediamine
Various
types of
ligands
Multidentate – several sites for complexing
Hexedentate – ethylenediaminetetraacetic
acid (EDTA)
Additional
multidentate
ligands
Thermodynamics of complexes
Strength of the complex represented by
stability constant
Kstab also called Kassociation
An equilibrium constant for formation of
complex
Typical metals can form multiple complexes
in water with constant composition
Al3+, AlF2+, AlF2+, AlF3, AlF4SAl = Al3+ + AlF2+ + AlF2+ + AlF3 + AlF4-
Example:
Kstab =
Al3+ + 4F- = AlF4aAlF4(aAl3+)(aF-)4
Another example:
Ca2+ + SO42- = CaSO4o
The o indicates no charge – a complex
Since CaSO4º not solid anhydrite –a single
molecule
Dissolved – must include the CaSO4º in
thermodynamic calculations
aCaSO4º ≠ mCaSO4º
Kstab =
aCaSO4o
(aCa2+)(aSO42-)
Examples of Kstab calculations and effects
of complexing on concentrations