Lanthanide contraction

The lanthanide contraction is the greater-than-expected decrease in atomic radii and ionic radii of the elements in the lanthanide series, from left to right. It is caused by the poor shielding effect of nuclear charge by the 4f electrons along with the expected periodic trend of increasing electronegativity and nuclear charge on moving from left to right. About 10% of the lanthanide contraction has been attributed to relativistic effects.[1]

A decrease in atomic radii can be observed across the 4f elements from atomic number 57, lanthanum, to 70, ytterbium. This results in smaller than otherwise expected atomic radii and ionic radii for the subsequent d-block elements starting with 71, lutetium.[2][3][4][5] This effect causes the radii of transition metals of group 5 and 6 to become unusually similar, as the expected increase in radius going down a period is nearly cancelled out by the f-block insertion, and has many other far ranging consequences in post-lanthanide elements.

The decrease in ionic radii (Ln3+) is much more uniform compared to decrease in atomic radii.

Element Atomic electron
configuration
(all begin with [Xe])
Ln3+ electron
configuration
Ln3+ radius (pm)
(6-coordinate)
La 5d16s2 4f0 103
Ce 4f15d16s2 4f1 102
Pr 4f36s2 4f2 99
Nd 4f46s2 4f3 98.3
Pm 4f56s2 4f4 97
Sm 4f66s2 4f5 95.8
Eu 4f76s2 4f6 94.7
Gd 4f75d16s2 4f7 93.8
Tb 4f96s2 4f8 92.3
Dy 4f106s2 4f9 91.2
Ho 4f116s2 4f10 90.1
Er 4f126s2 4f11 89
Tm 4f136s2 4f12 88
Yb 4f146s2 4f13 86.8
Lu 4f145d16s2 4f14 86.1

The term was coined by the Norwegian geochemist Victor Goldschmidt in his series "Geochemische Verteilungsgesetze der Elemente" (Geochemical distribution laws of the elements).[6]

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference :0 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Chistyakov, V. M. (1968). "Biron's Secondary Periodicity of the Side d-subgroups of Mendeleev's Short Table". Journal of General Chemistry of the USSR. 38 (2): 213–214. Retrieved 6 January 2024.
  3. ^ Housecroft, C. E.; Sharpe, A. G. (2004). Inorganic Chemistry (2nd ed.). Prentice Hall. pp. 536, 649, 743. ISBN 978-0-13-039913-7.
  4. ^ Cotton, F. Albert; Wilkinson, Geoffrey (1988), Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (5th ed.), New York: Wiley-Interscience, pp. 776, 955, ISBN 0-471-84997-9
  5. ^ Jolly, William L. Modern Inorganic Chemistry, McGraw-Hill 1984, p. 22
  6. ^ Goldschmidt, Victor M. "Geochemische Verteilungsgesetze der Elemente", Part V "Isomorphie und Polymorphie der Sesquioxyde. Die Lanthaniden-Kontraktion und ihre Konsequenzen", Oslo, 1925

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