Vital Coordination Compounds
Exploring Cisplatin, Wilkinson's Catalyst, Chlorophyll, and Vitamin B12.
Coordination compounds are not just laboratory curiosities; they are fundamentally essential to industrial chemistry and biological life. In this post, we will explore four of the most critical coordination complexes known to science.
1 Cisplatin (Medicine & Oncology)
Cisplatin is one of the most successful anti-cancer chemotherapy drugs ever discovered, used primarily to treat testicular, ovarian, and lung cancers. Its IUPAC name is cis-diamminedichloridoplatinum(II).
Cisplatin
Square Planar Geometry
- Formula: $cis-[Pt(NH_3)_2Cl_2]$
- Central Metal: Platinum ($Pt^{2+}$) in a $d^8$ configuration.
- Mechanism of Action: Once inside a cell, the chloride ligands are displaced by water. The platinum center then binds to the N7 reactive center on purine residues (specifically guanine) in DNA.
- Because the leaving groups ($Cl^-$) are cis to each other, the Pt cross-links adjacent guanines on the same DNA strand, kinking the DNA and triggering cell death (apoptosis) in rapidly dividing cancer cells.
2 Wilkinson's Catalyst (Industrial Catalysis)
Wilkinson's Catalyst is a historically monumental homogeneous catalyst used for the hydrogenation of alkenes at mild temperatures and pressures.
- Formula: $[RhCl(PPh_3)_3]$
- IUPAC Name: Chloridotris(triphenylphosphine)rhodium(I)
- Structure: A square planar, 16-electron complex featuring a Rhodium($I$) center.
- Function: It selectively reduces carbon-carbon double bonds (alkenes to alkanes) without affecting other functional groups like carbonyls or nitro groups. The mechanism involves oxidative addition of $H_2$, alkene coordination, migratory insertion, and reductive elimination.
Wilkinson's Catalyst
Square Planar Rh(I)
3 Chlorophyll (Plant Biology)
Chlorophyll is the green pigment found in cyanobacteria and the chloroplasts of algae and plants. It is the fundamental molecule responsible for photosynthesis, capturing energy from sunlight.
Chlorophyll Core
Magnesium Porphyrin
- Central Metal: Magnesium ($Mg^{2+}$).
- Ligand System: A modified porphyrin ring (specifically a chlorin ring) acts as a massive tetradentate macrocyclic ligand.
- Function: The highly conjugated $\pi$-electron system of the porphyrin ring allows it to absorb visible light strongly in the red and blue regions (reflecting green). The energy excites electrons, initiating the photosynthetic electron transport chain.
4 Vitamin B12 (Human Biology)
Vitamin B12 (Cyanocobalamin) is a water-soluble vitamin essential for brain function, nervous tissue health, and red blood cell production. It is structurally the most complex vitamin known.
- Central Metal: Cobalt ($Co^{3+}$).
- Ligand System: A corrin ring. (Similar to porphyrin, but missing one bridging carbon, making it slightly smaller and more flexible).
- Organometallic Nature: Vitamin B12 is unique in biology because its active forms (like methylcobalamin) feature a direct naturally occurring Metal-Carbon ($Co-C$) bond.
- Deficiency: Lack of Vitamin B12 leads to pernicious anemia.
Vitamin B12 Core
Cobalt Corrin Complex
Quick Review Summary
| Compound | Central Metal | Key Ligand / Geometry | Primary Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cisplatin | Platinum ($Pt^{2+}$) | Ammonia, Chloride / Square Planar | Anti-cancer chemotherapy drug |
| Wilkinson's Catalyst | Rhodium ($Rh^+$) | Triphenylphosphine / Square Planar | Homogeneous hydrogenation of alkenes |
| Chlorophyll | Magnesium ($Mg^{2+}$) | Porphyrin ring (Macrocyclic) | Photosynthesis (light absorption) |
| Vitamin B12 | Cobalt ($Co^{3+}$) | Corrin ring (Macrocyclic) | Treats pernicious anemia, enzymatic cofactor |
Knowledge Check
10 Practice MCQs on Applications of Coordination Compounds
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