Pentagonal bipyramidal molecular geometry

In chemistry, a pentagonal bipyramid is a molecular geometry with one atom at the centre with seven ligands at the corners of a pentagonal bipyramid. A perfect pentagonal bipyramid belongs to the molecular point group D5h.

Pentagonal bipyramidal molecular geometry
ExamplesIF7, ZrF3−7
Point groupD5h
Coordination number7
Bond angle(s)90°, 72°
μ (Polarity)0

The pentagonal bipyramid is a case where bond angles surrounding an atom are not identical (see also trigonal bipyramidal molecular geometry).[page needed] This is one of the three common shapes for heptacoordinate transition metal complexes, along with the capped octahedron and the capped trigonal prism.[page needed]

Pentagonal bipyramids are claimed to be promising coordination geometries for lanthanide-based single-molecule magnets, since they present no extradiagonal crystal field terms, therefore minimising spin mixing, and all of their diagonal terms are in first approximation protected from low-energy vibrations, minimising vibronic coupling.

Examples

  • Iodine heptafluoride (IF7) with 7 bonding groups
  • Rhenium heptafluoride (ReF7)
  • Peroxo chromium (IV) complexes, such as [Cr(O2)2(NH3)3], where the peroxo groups occupy four of the planar positions.
  • ZrF3−
    7
    and HfF3−
    7

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