if you don't mind me asking, how do you know so quickly that T2g is lower in energy than Eg for an octahedral?
Simply because it is always like that: T
2g is always lower in energy than E
g for an octahedral geometry.
(Remark, it is not necessarily true for a different geometry.)
Why is it so?
If you look at the orbitals belonging to the group E
g, namely d
z2 and d
x2-y2, they are pointing directly towards the Cl
- ligands
they are more destabilised.
And for the group T
2g, the 3 orbitals d
xy, d
xz and d
yz that it contains are not pointing directly towards the ligands, but rather towards the space in between them
T
2g is less destabilised.
this would be important to know when determining high spin vs low spin right?
What is important when determining high or low spin, is the energy gap between E
g and T
2g.
If E
g is much higher in energy than T
2g, the electrons will occupy T
2g first. You have a low spin.
If E
g is close in energy from T
2g, the electrons will occupy both T
2g and E
g. You have a high spin.
Ir3+ would have 6 valence electrons yes, but would the chlorides (or any other ligands like water or PPh3) also contribute to these as well?
No, you don't count electrons from ligands. We consider only valence electrons coming from Ir
3+.
If IrCl
63- is low spin, then you have T
2g6E
g0. The compound would be diamagnetic.
If IrCl
63- is high spin, then you have T
2g4E
g2. The compound would be paramagnetic.
I am not sure which one of the two possibilities is right. I don't know the T
2g-E
g energy gap for that compound.