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Why is tetracyanonickelate, $\ce{[Ni(CN)4]^{2-}}$ square planar?

  • $\ce{CN}$, for being a strong field, would not follow Hund's rule.
  • the central atom $\ce{Ni}$ would have a +2 charge so its configuration would change from $\ce{3d^8 4s^2}$ to $\ce{3d^8 4s^0}$
  • Using the statements above and using crystal field theory I get its hybridization as $\ce{dsp^3}$, which suggests that its shape must be trigonal bipyramidal while it is not.
Gaurang Tandon
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Infi
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3 Answers3

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This is the square planar splitting diagram

enter image description here

Many d8 metal complexes are usually square planar because a very stable electron configuration is achieved if you put the electrons on this splitting diagram -6 electrons stabilizing the compound and only two slightly destabilizing electrons-

Now you could ask, why then not d6 and d7 adopt this cinfiguration? Because for 6 or 7 electrons, an even more stable state is achieved with octahedral fields.

About hybridization... Forget about it when talking about coordination complexes. It's completely useless. It can't explain or predict anything that CFT/LFT can't

Altered State
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The use of hybridisation for transition metal complexes is extremely outdated and often leads to incorrect predictions and rationalisations of transition metal chemistry. If you are using it routinely, please stop using it.

You may wish to first refer to this other answer of mine for a discussion of a very similar case:

Why is [PdCl4]2- square planar whereas [NiCl4]2- is tetrahedral?

There, the comparison is between a 3d and a 4d metal. However, the factors that affect the geometry of a $\mathrm{d^8}$ complex are the same. They are described in much more detail in that link. To summarise:

  1. Adoption of a square planar geometry is favoured due to occupation of four low-energy orbitals formed.

  2. Adoption of a tetrahedral geometry is favoured due to (a) relief of steric repulsions; and (b) the relief of electron-electron repulsions due to adoption of a high-spin configuration.

When the ligand is $\ce{CN-}$, a strong sigma donor and pi acceptor, the corresponding splitting of the orbitals in $D_\mathrm{4h}$ symmetry will be very large. Consequently, the electronic stabilisation derived upon adoption of a square planar geometry in $\ce{[Ni(CN)4]^2-}$ is much larger than for other complexes, e.g. $\ce{[NiCl4]^2-}$.

It's quite possible that the linear ligand $\ce{CN-}$ also introduces less steric repulsions in a square planar geometry than a halide, like $\ce{Cl-}$ or $\ce{Br-}$, would. However, the main factor is likely to simply be the large electronic stabilisation, which in turn derives from the fact that $\ce{CN-}$ is very high in the spectrochemical series.

orthocresol
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It's tetrahedral; as not 6 lone pairs are coming from $\ce{CN}$, only $\ce{CN}$ are attached. Therefore, only 4 lone pairs will affect the configuration.

So by now applying CFT you will get its hybridization to be $\ce{dsp^2}$ which will make the shape of tetrahedral.

Yashas
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Pulkit
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  • Please make use of the punctuation marks. It is difficult to understand what you've stated. – Yashas Mar 24 '17 at 07:50
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    Sorry, this is incorrect. It is square planar as is common for d8 complexes for the reasons given above, see e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyanonickelate . Also hybridization is one of those tools you learn earlyish in your chemical career and then spend a lot of time trying to avoid using it. – Ian Bush Mar 24 '17 at 08:26