Advances in Solution Chemistry


Book Description

From June 2nd to 5th 1980, the Vth International Symposium on Solute-Solute-Solvent Interactions was held in Florence, Italy. Owing to the large range of interests included in the program and to their interdisciplinary nature, a number of microsymposia on specific subjects were organized, in addition to plenary lectures, session lectures and poster sessions. The abstracts of the Confer­ ence were published in Inorganica Chimica Acta as a special publi­ cation and as an appendix to the issue of June 1980. The plenary lectures have been published, as customary, in the Journal of Pure and Applied Chemistry (October 1980) and the results of the following microsymposia are being published in specialized journals: 1) Electronic Rearrangements Induced by Solute-Solvent Interactions (Local Editor J. H. Ammeter) - ~. I. Phys. Chimie. 2) Anion Activation in Quaternary Salts, Crown Ethers, Cryptates and Related Systems (Local Editor F. Montanari) - I. Mol. Catalysis. 3) Solvent Effects in Homogeneous Catalysis By Metal Complexes (Local Editor R. Ugo) - I. Mol. Catalysis. 4) Theoretical Models in Biochemical and Related Systems (Local Editor E. Clementi) -~. Computational Chemistry. 5) Thermodynamic Approach in Coordinative Interactions in Solution (Local Editor P. Paoletti) - Advances in Molecular Relaxation and Interaction Processes.




National Union Catalog


Book Description

Includes entries for maps and atlases.







Highlights in Solute-Solvent Interactions


Book Description

Most organic molecules retain their integrity when dissolved, and even though in such cases the effects exerted by solvents are, in the language of the coordination chemist, of the "outer sphere" kind, the choice of solvent can be critical to the successful outcome of an operation or preparation. Solubilities of reactants and products must be taken into account, and even if the organic principals in the reactions retain their integrity, many of the reagents are electrolytes, and their state of aggregation will affect their reactivity. In testifying to the importance of understanding solute-solvent interactions I draw attention to a large class of inorganic species for which the involvement in the chemical and physical properties by the solvent is even more deeply seated. It is comprised by the large body of metal atoms in low oxidation states for which solvent molecules intervene as reagents. At the same time, because the ions carry charges, the effects arising from outer sphere interactions are usually greater than they are for neutral molecules. To cite an example: when FeCb(s) is dissolved in water to form a dilute - say O. OlO- solution there is a complete reorganization of the coordination sphere of the cation. Whereas in the solid each cation is surrounded by six chloride ions, in the solution the dominant form is [Fe(H20)6]3+ followed by [Fe(H20)sCI]2+, [Fe(H20)4CI2]+, etc. in rapidly decreasing abundance.