The f-block Elements
The two series of elements in the f block derive from the filling of the seven 4f and 5f orbitals, respectively. This occupation of f orbitals from f¹ to f¹⁴ corresponds to:
Cerium (Ce) to Lutetium (Lu) in Period 6
Symbol: Ln
Core-like 4f orbitals • Predominantly ionic bonding • Uniform +3 oxidation state
Thorium (Th) to Lawrencium (Lr) in Period 7
Symbol: An
More diffuse 5f orbitals • Covalent bonding possible • Variable oxidation states
The f-block in the Periodic Table
23.1 The Valence Orbitals
To understand the chemistry of f-block elements, we must consider how the 4f and 5f orbitals project out from the core. The f and d orbitals have been compared to flower petals:
- Lack inner radial maximum
- Poorly shielded from nuclear charge
- Buried below 5d and 6s orbitals
- Contract sharply → become core-like
- Minimal overlap with ligand orbitals
- Have an inner radial maximum
- More penetrating, better shielding
- More diffuse than 4f
- Can overlap with ligand orbitals
- 6d orbitals extend even further
The consequence of these orbital characteristics is fundamental:
- Lanthanoids behave like Group 2 metals with nondirectional electrostatic bonding
- Early actinoids (Th–Pu) resemble d metals with rich complexes and oxidation states
- Later actinoids become more lanthanoid-like as 5f contracts into core
Lanthanoid Chemistry
The lanthanoids are all electropositive metals with remarkable uniformity of chemical properties. The significant difference between two lanthanoids is often only their size, which allows "tuning" of compound properties.
23.4 General Trends
(a) Electronic Structures
| Z | Name | Symbol | M config | M³⁺ config |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 57 | Lanthanum | La | [Xe]5d¹6s² | [Xe] |
| 58 | Cerium | Ce | [Xe]4f¹5d¹6s² | [Xe]4f¹ |
| 59 | Praseodymium | Pr | [Xe]4f³6s² | [Xe]4f² |
| 60 | Neodymium | Nd | [Xe]4f⁴6s² | [Xe]4f³ |
| 61 | Promethium | Pm | [Xe]4f⁵6s² | [Xe]4f⁴ |
| 62 | Samarium | Sm | [Xe]4f⁶6s² | [Xe]4f⁵ |
| 63 | Europium | Eu | [Xe]4f⁷6s² | [Xe]4f⁶ |
| 64 | Gadolinium | Gd | [Xe]4f⁷5d¹6s² | [Xe]4f⁷ |
| 65 | Terbium | Tb | [Xe]4f⁹6s² | [Xe]4f⁸ |
| 66 | Dysprosium | Dy | [Xe]4f¹⁰6s² | [Xe]4f⁹ |
| 67 | Holmium | Ho | [Xe]4f¹¹6s² | [Xe]4f¹⁰ |
| 68 | Erbium | Er | [Xe]4f¹²6s² | [Xe]4f¹¹ |
| 69 | Thulium | Tm | [Xe]4f¹³6s² | [Xe]4f¹² |
| 70 | Ytterbium | Yb | [Xe]4f¹⁴6s² | [Xe]4f¹³ |
| 71 | Lutetium | Lu | [Xe]4f¹⁴5d¹6s² | [Xe]4f¹⁴ |
(c) The Lanthanoid Contraction
All Ln³⁺ ions have the electron configuration [Xe]4fⁿ, and their radii contract steadily from 116 pm for La³⁺ to 98 pm for Lu³⁺ (an 18% decrease). This is attributed to the increase in effective nuclear charge as electrons are added to the poorly shielding 4f subshell.
(e) Standard Potentials and Oxidation States
The oxidation state Ln(III) prevails through the 4f row. However, some elements show atypical oxidation states (+2 or +4) when they can attain relatively stable electron configurations:
Strong oxidizing agent
Stable reducing agent
Tb₄O₇ in air
Strong reductant
| Element | E°(Ln³⁺/Ln) / V | r(Ln³⁺) / pm | Oxidation Numbers |
|---|---|---|---|
| La | −2.38 | 116 | 3 |
| Ce | −2.34 | 114 | 3, 4 |
| Eu | −1.99 | 107 | 2, 3 |
| Gd | −2.28 | 105 | 3 |
| Tb | −2.31 | 104 | 3, 4 |
| Yb | −2.22 | 99 | 2, 3 |
| Lu | −2.30 | 98 | 3 |
23.5 Electronic, Optical, and Magnetic Properties
(a) Electronic Absorption Spectra
Lanthanoid(III) ions are weakly coloured, with absorptions from f–f transitions. Key characteristics:
- Much narrower bands than d-metal complexes
- Insensitive to coordinated ligands (4f buried beneath 5s, 5p)
- Molar absorption coefficients: 1–10 dm³ mol⁻¹ cm⁻¹ (vs ~100 for d-metals)
- Laporte forbidden transitions with little vibronic enhancement
| Ion | Colour | Ground State | μ/μB (theory) | μ/μB (observed) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| La³⁺ | Colourless | ¹S₀ | 0 | 0 |
| Ce³⁺ | Colourless | ²F5/2 | 2.54 | 2.46 |
| Pr³⁺ | Green | ³H₄ | 3.58 | 3.47–3.61 |
| Nd³⁺ | Violet | ⁴I9/2 | 3.62 | 3.44–3.65 |
| Sm³⁺ | Yellow | ⁶H5/2 | 0.84 | 1.54–1.65 |
| Eu³⁺ | Pink | ⁷F₀ | 0 | 3.32–3.54 |
| Gd³⁺ | Colourless | ⁸S7/2 | 7.94 | 7.9–8.0 |
| Tb³⁺ | Pink | ⁷F₆ | 9.72 | 9.69–9.81 |
| Dy³⁺ | Yellow-green | ⁶H15/2 | 10.65 | 10.0–10.6 |
| Ho³⁺ | Yellow | ⁵I₈ | 10.60 | 10.4–10.7 |
| Er³⁺ | Lilac | ⁴I15/2 | 9.58 | 9.4–9.5 |
| Lu³⁺ | Colourless | ¹S₀ | 0 | 0 |
Problem: What is the ground-state term symbol of Pr³⁺ (f²)?
Answer: Following Hund's rules:
- Two electrons in different f orbitals: ML = (+3) + (+2) = +5 → L = 5 (H term)
- Lower-spin arrangement is triplet: S = 1 → ³H
- Less than half-full shell: lowest J = |L−S| = 4
Ground state: ³H₄
(b) Luminescence
Visible Spectrum & Lanthanoid Emission
■ Tb³⁺: ⁷F6−0 ← ⁵D₄ (green, 480–580 nm) ■ Eu³⁺: ⁷F0−6 ← ⁵D₀ (red, 580–700 nm)
Antenna Effect: Luminescence is greatly enhanced by placing a light-absorbing group on the ligand. Energy transfers from the antenna to excited states of the lanthanoid (Jablonski diagram).
Applications of Lanthanoid Luminescence
Red phosphors in displays
1.064 μm emission
Magnetic resonance imaging
10× iron strength
(c) Magnetic Properties
The magnetic moment μ is expressed in terms of total angular momentum J:
where the Landé g-factor is:
Theory agrees well with experiment because the unpaired 4f electrons are core-like and couple strongly with orbital angular momentum but interact little with ligands.
23.6–23.8 Compounds of the Lanthanoids
Binary Ionic Compounds
All lanthanoids react with O₂ at high temperatures to give sesquioxides Ln₂O₃, but some form higher oxides:
- CeO₂ – Cerium dioxide (fluorite structure), widely used as catalyst
- Pr₆O₁₁, Tb₄O₇ – Mixed Ln(III)/Ln(IV) oxides formed in air
- EuO, YbO – Monoxides (rock-salt structure), white insulators
La₂O₃ structure: La³⁺ coordination number = 7
Lu₂O₃ structure: Lu³⁺ coordination number = 6
Lanthanoids react directly with halogens to form trihalides LnX₃:
- LaF₃: La³⁺ in irregular 11-coordinate environment
- LaCl₃: La³⁺ in 9-coordinate tricapped trigonal prism
- CeF₄: Only Ln(IV) fluoride stable at room temperature
- SmI₂: Important reducing agent (blue THF solutions)
All lanthanoid metals react with H₂ to give binary hydrides (LnH₂ to LnH₃):
- Dihydrides adopt fluorite structure
- Most are black, metallic conductors: Ln³⁺(H⁻)₂(e⁻)
- EuH₂, YbH₂: White insulating solids (4f⁷, 4f¹⁴)
- LaNi₅H₆: Studied for hydrogen storage
23.7 Ternary and Complex Oxides
Lanthanoid ions frequently occupy cation positions in perovskites and garnets:
LaFeO₃, GdFeO₃ structure type
High-Tc superconductors: LnBa₂Cu₃O₇
8-coordinate Ln sites
YAG (Y₃Al₅O₁₂), YIG (Y₃Fe₅O₁₂)
23.8 Coordination Compounds
Without strong orbital overlap, Ln³⁺–ligand bonds are electrostatic. Stable complexes require:
- Polydentate chelating ligands
- Hard donors (O, F preferred)
- Macrocyclic ligands for nonlabile complexes
Tricapped trigonal prism
[Ln(OH₂)₉]³⁺
Square antiprism
[La(acac)₃(OH₂)₂]
Ion-exchange separation: Smaller Ln³⁺ ions (heavier lanthanoids) are more strongly complexed by eluents and elute first. This enabled the separation of all lanthanoid ions.
23.9 Organometallic Compounds
Key differences from d-block organometallics:
- No π backbonding (5d empty, 4f buried) → No stable CO, alkene complexes
- Need good donor ligands (Cp, N-heterocyclic carbenes)
- 18-electron rule NOT applicable
- Very air/moisture sensitive
- Large Ln³⁺ accommodates three Cp ligands easily
Important Complex Types
Tris-cyclopentadienyl
Tend to oligomerize
Pentamethyl-Cp
η⁵ ⇌ η¹ equilibrium
Cerocene
η⁸-cyclooctatetraene
Samarocene (Sm²⁺)
Reacts with N₂
Catalytic Applications
Ln(III) organometallics (especially [Ln(Cp*)X]) are highly active catalysts for:
- Ziegler–Natta polymerization of alkenes
- σ-bond metathesis (C–H activation in methane!)
- Not poisoned by CO or sulfides
Actinoid Chemistry
The chemical properties of actinoids show much less uniformity than lanthanoids. The early members (Ac–Am) resemble the early d metals with a rich variety of oxidation states.
23.10 General Trends
| Z | Name | Symbol | Config | Oxidation States | t1/2 (most stable) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 89 | Actinium | Ac | [Rn]6d¹7s² | 3 | 21.8 y |
| 90 | Thorium | Th | [Rn]6d²7s² | 4 | 1.41×10¹⁰ y |
| 91 | Protactinium | Pa | [Rn]5f²6d¹7s² | 3, 4, 5 | 3.28×10⁴ y |
| 92 | Uranium | U | [Rn]5f³6d¹7s² | 3, 4, 5, 6 | 4.47×10⁹ y |
| 93 | Neptunium | Np | [Rn]5f⁴6d¹7s² | 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 | 2.14×10⁶ y |
| 94 | Plutonium | Pu | [Rn]5f⁶7s² | 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 | 8.1×10⁷ y |
| 95 | Americium | Am | [Rn]5f⁷7s² | 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | 7.38×10³ y |
| 96 | Curium | Cm | [Rn]5f⁷6d¹7s² | 3, 4 | 1.6×10⁷ y |
| 97 | Berkelium | Bk | [Rn]5f⁹7s² | 3, 4 | 1.38×10³ y |
| 98 | Californium | Cf | [Rn]5f¹⁰7s² | 2, 3, 4 | 900 y |
The Uranyl Unit: AnO₂²⁺
Linear or nearly linear dioxido units dominate the chemistry for oxidation numbers +5 and +6 of U, Np, Pu, and Am:
Linear O═An═O (D∞h symmetry)
- σ bonding: O 2p with An 6dz² (g) and 5fz³/6pz hybrid (u)
- π bonding: O 2p with An 6dπ and 5fπ orbitals
- Very strong An–O bonds: dissociation energy 618 kJ/mol for UO₂²⁺
- Extremely slow O atom exchange (t1/2 ~ 10⁹ s)
Frost Diagrams: Oxidation State Stability
Problem: Use the Frost diagram for Th to describe the relative stability of Th(II) and Th(III).
Answer: Th²⁺ lies above lines connecting Th(0) with higher oxidation states → susceptible to disproportionation. Th(III) has steep negative slope → readily oxidized by water. Th(IV) is the exclusive stable oxidation state in aqueous solution.
23.12–23.13 Thorium, Uranium, Plutonium
Because of their ready availability and low radioactivity, Th and U chemistry can be performed with ordinary laboratory techniques.
Thorium
Uranium
Uranium has more varied chemistry with access to U(III) through U(VI):
Powerfully reducing
Deep orange-red solutions
Common, stable
UCl₄ starting material
Disproportionates
Unstable
Very stable uranyl
Yellow, fluorescent
Uranium Hexafluoride
UF₆ is synthesized on large scale for isotope separation (gaseous diffusion/centrifugation):
UF₆ sublimes at 57°C and F exists as single isotope → ideal for mass-based separation.
Uranocene: [U(C₈H₈)₂]
Uranium forms remarkable sandwich compounds with cyclooctatetraene dianion (C₈H₈²⁻):
- D8h symmetry with eclipsed rings
- 20 electrons from two C₈H₈²⁻ fill bonding orbitals
- Two 5f electrons in weakly bonding e3u (fφ) orbital
- Triplet ground state (two unpaired electrons)
- Only known compounds with possible φ bonding contribution!
Plutonium
Plutonium shows remarkable redox complexity—four oxidation states can coexist in solution:
- Pu³⁺, Pu⁴⁺, PuO₂⁺, PuO₂²⁺ separated by less than 1 V
- PuO₂⁺ tends to disproportionate → Pu⁴⁺ + PuO₂²⁺
- Carbonate stabilizes Pu(VI) as [PuO₂(CO₃)₃]⁴⁻
- At least 6 allotropic forms of Pu metal!
Nuclear Applications
Chain reaction power generation
Space probe power sources
α-particle ionization
Spontaneous fission
Key Comparisons: Lanthanoids vs Actinoids
| Property | Lanthanoids (4f) | Actinoids (5f) |
|---|---|---|
| f orbitals | Core-like, no radial node | More diffuse, inner maximum |
| Bonding | Predominantly ionic | Covalent character (early An) |
| Dominant oxidation state | +3 throughout series | Variable (+3 to +7 for early An) |
| Ligand-field effects | Negligible | Small but observable |
| Spectra | Sharp, narrow bands | Broader, more intense bands |
| Coordination numbers | High (6–12) | High (up to 12) |
| Characteristic unit | Ln³⁺ | AnO₂ⁿ⁺ (n = 1, 2) |
| Radioactivity | Only Pm unstable | All radioactive |
1. Give a balanced equation for the reaction of any lanthanoid with aqueous acid.
2. Explain the variation in ionic radii between La³⁺ and Lu³⁺.
3. Derive the ground-state term symbol for Tb³⁺, Nd³⁺, Ho³⁺, Er³⁺, Lu³⁺.
4. Predict what species form when Pu metal is dissolved in dilute HCl.