How many isomers (restricted to optical and geometric isomerism) exist for the coordination compound (PPh3)2PtCl2 (Ph = phenyl), known to be square planar?
If you imagine the first bond drawn going into the page on the top left of the central atom, label this substituent a; second bond going into the page on the top right, label this substituent b; third bond going out of the page on the bottom right, label this substituent c; fourth bond going out of the page on the bottom left, label this substituent d.
I thought optical isomers were possible for both tetrahedral and octahedral complexes, but not square planar ones. Thus the two solutions should simply be: {a=PPh3, b=PPh3, c=Cl, d=Cl}, {a=PPh3, b=Cl, c=PPh3, d=Cl}. And it should not matter whether the bonds are going in or out of the page, just the geometric positions. But the mark scheme has different solutions: {a=PPh3, b=PPh3, c=Cl, d=Cl}, {a=PPh3, b=Cl, c=Cl, d=PPh3}. What is going on?