Organometallic chemistry is the fascinating “bridge” where organic carbon meets the heavy-duty power of metals. It’s the secret sauce behind some of the world’s most important industrial reactions—from the plastic in your phone to the medications in your cabinet. But let’s be real: between the 18-electron rule, back-bonding, and complex catalytic cycles like Heck or Suzuki, it’s a subject that can make even the brightest student’s head spin.
Below is the exam paper download link
PDF Past Paper On Organometallic Chemistry For Revision
Above is the exam paper download link
The difference between a “C” and an “A” in Organometallics isn’t just knowing the definitions; it’s being able to predict how a metal center will behave when a specific ligand approaches. To help you sharpen your skills, we’ve put together a high-intensity Q&A revision session. Once you’ve mastered these concepts, click the link at the bottom
Crucial Q&A: Mastering the Metal-Carbon Bond
1. What is the “18-Electron Rule” and why is it the “Octet Rule” of this field?
In the s and p-blocks, atoms want 8 electrons. In transition metal organometallics, the metal wants to fill its s, p, and d orbitals, which total 18 electrons. If a complex hits 18, it’s generally stable and “saturated.” If it has 16, it’s “unsaturated” and hungry for more ligands. When you’re looking at a past paper, the first thing you should do is count the valence electrons to see if a molecule is likely to react or stay put.
2. How does “Synergic Bonding” (Back-Bonding) strengthen the M-C bond?
This is a “give and take” relationship. The ligand (like Carbon Monoxide) donates its lone pair to the metal. In return, the metal “back-donates” electrons from its filled d-orbitals into the empty anti-bonding orbitals of the ligand. This makes the Metal-Carbon bond stronger but actually weakens the Carbon-Oxygen bond. It’s a classic exam question: “How does the IR frequency of CO change upon coordination?”
3. What are the four main steps of a Catalytic Cycle?
While every cycle is different, most follow this rhythm:
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Oxidative Addition: The metal inserts itself into a bond, increasing its oxidation state.
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Ligand Coordination/Insertion: The “players” get into position.
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Transmetallation: (Common in cross-coupling) A second metal hands off a group to the main catalyst.
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Reductive Elimination: The final product is kicked off, and the metal returns to its original state, ready for another round.
4. How do you distinguish between a Fischer Carbene and a Schrock Carbene?
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Fischer Carbenes are found with low-oxidation-state metals and “electrophilic” carbons. They are the “soft” version.
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Schrock Carbenes involve high-oxidation-state metals and “nucleophilic” carbons. They are the “hard” version.
Knowing which is which tells you exactly how the molecule will behave when attacked by a reagent.
5. What is the significance of “Hapticity” ($\eta$)?
Hapticity tells you how many contiguous atoms of a ligand are actually touching the metal. A Ferrocene molecule, for example, has two cyclopentadienyl rings with $\eta^5$ hapticity, meaning five carbons are bonded to the Iron. If the hapticity changes during a reaction, the electron count changes, which usually triggers the next step in a mechanism.
Why You Should Practice with Past Papers
Organometallics is a visual subject. You need to see the cycles and the 3D arrangements of ligands to truly understand them.
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Counting Electrons Under Pressure: It’s easy to miscount in a quiet library. It’s harder in an exam hall. Past papers build the “mental math” needed for electron counting.
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Predicting the Intermediate: Exams rarely ask for the start and end; they ask you to draw the “unstable intermediate.” Practice helps you spot these “missing links.”
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Understanding Trends: Why does Palladium work for this reaction but Nickel doesn’t? Past papers highlight the subtle periodic trends that textbooks sometimes skip over.

Ready to master the mechanics of catalysis? Click the link below to access our curated PDF. It contains actual exam questions on hapticity, 18-electron counting, and the most common catalytic cycles used in modern chemistry.
Last updated on: April 3, 2026