Most of the chemistry has been observed only for the first three members of the group 12. The chemistry of copernicium is not well established and therefore the rest of the section deals only with zinc, cadmium and mercury.
Periodic trends All elements in this group are
metals. The similarity of the metallic radii of cadmium and mercury is an effect of the
lanthanide contraction. So, the trend in this group is unlike the trend in group 2, the
alkaline earths, where metallic radius increases smoothly from top to bottom of the group. All three metals have relatively low melting and boiling points, indicating that the
metallic bond is relatively weak, with relatively little overlap between the
valence band and the
conduction band. Thus, zinc is close to the boundary between metallic and
metalloid elements, which is usually placed between
gallium and
germanium, though gallium participates in
semi-conductors such as
gallium arsenide. Zinc and cadmium are
electropositive while mercury is not. Cadmium can also form species such as [Cd2Cl6]4− in which the metal's oxidation state is +1. Just as with mercury, the formation of a metal-metal bond results in a diamagnetic compound in which there are no unpaired electrons; thus, making the species very reactive. Zinc(I) is known mostly in the gas phase, in such compounds as linear Zn2Cl2, analogous to
calomel. In the solid phase, the rather exotic compound
decamethyldizincocene (Cp*Zn–ZnCp*) is known.
Classification The elements in group 12 are usually considered to be
d-block elements, but not
transition elements as the d-shell is full. Some authors classify these elements as
main-group elements because the
valence electrons are in ns2 orbitals. Nevertheless, they share many characteristics with the neighboring
group 11 elements on the periodic table, which are almost universally considered to be transition elements. For example, zinc shares many characteristics with the neighboring transition metal, copper. Zinc complexes merit inclusion in the
Irving-Williams series as zinc forms many complexes with the same
stoichiometry as complexes of copper(II), albeit with smaller
stability constants. There is little similarity between cadmium and silver as compounds of silver(II) are rare and those that do exist are very strong oxidizing agents. Likewise the common oxidation state for gold is +3, which precludes there being much common chemistry between mercury and gold, though there are similarities between mercury(I) and gold(I) such as the formation of linear dicyano complexes, [M(CN)2]−. According to
IUPAC's definition of transition metal as
an element whose atom has an incomplete d sub-shell, or which can give rise to cations with an incomplete d sub-shell, zinc and cadmium are not transition metals, while mercury is. This is because only mercury is known to have a compound where its oxidation state is higher than +2, in
mercury(IV) fluoride (though its existence is disputed, as later experiments trying to confirm its synthesis could not find evidence of HgF4). However, this classification is based on one highly atypical compound seen at non-equilibrium conditions and is at odds to mercury's more typical chemistry, and Jensen has suggested that it would be better to regard mercury as not being a transition metal.
Compounds All three metal ions form many
tetrahedral species, such as . Both zinc and cadmium can also form octahedral complexes such as the
aqua ions [M(H2O)6]2+ which are present in aqueous solutions of salts of these metals. Covalent character is achieved by using the s and p orbitals. Mercury, however, rarely exceeds a
coordination number of four. Coordination numbers of 2, 3, 5, 7 and 8 are also known. ==History==