Bonding in Inorganic and Coordination Compounds
A special issue of Molecules (ISSN 1420-3049). This special issue belongs to the section "Inorganic Chemistry".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2020) | Viewed by 41083
Special Issue Editor
Interests: light harvesting using inorganic coordination complexes as dyes in dye-sensitized solar cells (DSCs); development of emissive complexes for application in light-emitting electrochemical cells (LECs); water splitting and water oxidation catalysts; functional coordination polymers and networks; chemical education
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Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Molecules are defined by the bonds connecting their constituent atoms and ions. Thus, it is appropriate and overdue to dedicate a Special Issue of Molecules to the topic of bonding.
The concept of bonding is almost as old as chemistry itself. As alchemy transformed to chemistry, Newton discussed the forces that held atoms together. In the 19th century, concepts of bonding developed in parallel with those of valency and structure. Our modern understanding of the covalent bond is due to Gilbert Lewis and dates to 1916, whereas ionic bonding is more nebulous, but modern ideas date back to Kossel in the same year.
Pauling's seminal work 'The Chemical Bond' published in 1939 was pivotal in our understanding of bonding in chemical compounds and extended the electronic view of chemical structure from organic chemistry to the whole of chemistry. From an educational standpoint, concepts of bonding typically begin with a Lewis approach for simple covalent molecules and an electrostatic approach for ionic lattices. The picture soon becomes more complex, firstly when the ideas of covalent and ionic contributions to the same bond are introduced, and then when quantum mechanical models with ever more extended basis sets are used. The myriad of exotic structures of inorganic and organic molecules that now graces the literature continues to challenge accepted bonding models, and concepts such as hypervalency go in and out of fashion.
At the research level, the development of theoretical approaches has blossomed over the last few decades, and the application of density functional theory (DFT) to both small and large molecular species has become an integral part of chemical research. Combined theoretical and synthetic investigations have opened the door to both predictive models and the rationalization of structural and physical (e.g., spectroscopic) observations. The development of robust computational methods to investigate the structures of, and bonding in, excited as well as ground state species has been a fundamental breakthrough, giving significant insight into, for example, changes that occur upon photoexcitation of molecules. In the third Millennium, it is difficult to envisage chemical research without input from theoretical investigations.
Single-crystal X-ray diffraction is routinely used to verify the structures of discrete molecules, extended arrays and proteins. In-depth analysis of structural data is key to an understanding of molecular bonding and distributions of electron density. The marriage of crystallographic and theoretical (in particular, DFT) results provides a firm foundation for the further elaboration of bonding models in inorganic, coordination and organometallic chemistry.
The theme of this Special Issue of Molecules is 'Bonding in Inorganic and Coordination Compounds', and I invite both retrospective and current research contributions, as well as manuscripts that contribute towards the development of bonding analysis, and to chemical education.
Prof. Dr. Catherine Housecroft
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- chemical bond
- covalent
- ionic
- electron density distribution
- coordination
- organometallic
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