Polydentate ligands
Ligands which only bond to the central metal atom/ion through one site are termed monodentate. Some ligand molecules are able to bind to the metal ion through multiple sites, due to having free lone pairs on more than one atom, these are called polydentate. EDTA is an example of a polydentate ligand - it is able to bond through 6 sites, completely surrounding the ion. Polydentate ligands tend to be very stable, as it is necessary to break all of their bonds to the central atom for them to be displaced.
Common ligands
- F-
- Cl-
- Br-
- I-
- CO
- RC:CR - compounds with double carbon bonds
- Benzene
- Cryptates
- Crown ethers
- OH-
In biochemistry, a ligand will refer to a small molecule that binds to a larger macromolecule, whether or not the ligand actually binds at a metal site or not. This is probably a carryover from the large number of binding studies on oxygen transport proteins, such as hemoglobin, where the ligand indeed did bind at a metal site, an expansion of the term to a more general case of binding.