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How do reaction mechanisms differ between transition metals and main-group elements?

Because transition metals and main-group elements operate under very different bonding and electronic rules, their reaction mechanisms also differ.


Key Differences in Reaction Mechanisms

1. Availability of d-Orbitals

  • Transition metals: Have partially filled d-orbitals, which allow variable coordination numbers, oxidation states, and bonding modes.
    → This enables mechanisms like ligand exchange, oxidative addition, reductive elimination, and electron transfer.
  • Main-group elements: Typically use s and p orbitals, with limited ability to expand coordination numbers (except heavier elements using d-orbitals).
    → Their reactions follow more classical covalent bond mechanisms (substitution, addition, elimination).

2. Oxidation State Changes

  • Transition metals: Can easily undergo redox changes during a mechanism.
    Example: Pd(0) → Pd(II) in oxidative addition.
  • Main-group elements: Usually have fixed oxidation states dictated by the octet rule.
    Example: Carbon in methane almost never changes oxidation state during substitution.

3. Reaction Pathways

  • Transition metals:
    • Ligand substitution → associative, dissociative, interchange.
    • Electron transfer → inner-sphere, outer-sphere.
    • Organometallic steps → oxidative addition, reductive elimination, migratory insertion, β-hydride elimination.
  • Main-group elements:
    • SN1 / SN2 substitution (at saturated centers).
    • E1 / E2 elimination.
    • Electrophilic or nucleophilic addition (to π-bonds).
    • Radical mechanisms (in halogenation, polymerization).

4. Coordination Flexibility

  • Transition metals: Can change coordination number during a mechanism (e.g., octahedral → 5-coordinate intermediate).
  • Main-group elements: Usually constrained by octet rule (CN = 4 for C, CN = 3 for N, etc.), so mechanisms don’t involve large coordination changes.

5. Catalysis

  • Transition metals: Widely used in homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis because they can shuttle between oxidation states and accommodate multiple ligands.
    → Example: Wilkinson’s catalyst in hydrogenation.
  • Main-group elements: Participate in catalysis, but usually by acid-base chemistry or radical processes, not by redox cycling.
    → Example: AlCl₃ in Friedel–Crafts reactions.

In short:

  • Transition metals: Flexible coordination, variable oxidation states, d-orbital involvement → mechanisms include ligand exchange, redox, and organometallic steps.
  • Main-group elements: Governed by octet rule, fixed valence, and classical covalent bonding → mechanisms follow substitution, elimination, and addition pathways.

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