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Metallate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Metallate or metalate is the name given to any complex anion containing a metal ligated to several atoms or small groups.

Typically, the metal will be one of the transition elements and the ligand will be oxygen or another chalcogenide or a cyanide group (though others are known). The chalcogenide metallates are known as oxometallates, thiometallates, selenometallates and tellurometallates; the cyanide metallates are known as cyanometallates.

Oxometallates include permanganate (MnO
4
), chromate (CrO2−
4
) and vanadate (VO
3
or VO3−
4
).

Thiometallates include tetrathiovanadate (VS3−
4
), tetrathiomolybdate (MoS2−
4
), tetrathiotungstate (WS2−
4
) and similar ions.[1]

Cyanometallates include ferricyanide and ferrocyanide.

Metallate is also used as a verb by bioinorganic chemistry to describe the act of adding metal atoms or ions to a site (synthetic ligand or protein).

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Diemann, E.; Müller, A. (1973). "Schwefel- und Selenverbindungen von Übergangsmetallen mit d0-Konfiguration" [Sulfur and selenium compounds of transition metals with d0 configurations]. Coordination Chemistry Reviews. 10 (1–2): 79–122. doi:10.1016/S0010-8545(00)80232-5.