A pair of oppositely charged ions held together by
Coulomb attraction without formation of a
covalent bond. Experimentally, an ion pair behaves as one unit in determining conductivity, kinetic
behaviour, osmotic properties, etc. Following Bjerrum, oppositely charged ions with
their centres closer together than a distance:
are considered to constitute an ion pair ('
Bjerrum ion pair').
[ and
are the charge numbers of the ions, and
is the
relative permittivity (or
dielectric constant) of the medium.] An ion pair, the
constituent ions of which are in direct contact (and not separated by an intervening solvent
or other neutral molecule) is designated as a '
tight ion pair' (or '
intimate' or '
contact ion pair'). A tight ion pair of
X+
and
Y−
is symbolically represented as
X+Y−. By contrast, an ion pair whose
constituent ions are separated by one or several solvent or other neutral molecules is described
as a '
loose ion pair', symbolically represented as
X+ ||
Y−. The members of a loose ion pair can readily interchange with other free or loosely
paired ions in the solution. This interchange may be detectable (e.g. by
isotopic labelling) and thus afford an experimental distinction between tight and loose ion pairs. A
further conceptual distinction has sometimes been made between two types of loose
ion pairs. In '
solvent-shared ion pairs' the ionic constituents of the pair are separated by only a single solvent molecule,
whereas in '
solvent-separated ion pairs' more than one solvent molecule intervenes. However, the term '
solvent-separated ion pair' must be used and interpreted with care since it has also widely been used as a less
specific term for '
loose' ion pair.
Source:
PAC, 1994, 66, 1077
(Glossary of terms used in physical organic chemistry (IUPAC Recommendations 1994))
on page 1126
PAC, 1995, 67, 1307
(Glossary of class names of organic compounds and reactivity intermediates based on
structure (IUPAC Recommendations 1995))
on page 1344