Chemistry - Why is gold unreactive when only one electron is in the outer shell?

Solution 1:

First off, gold does react. You can form stable gold alloys and gold compounds. It's just hard, mostly for reasons explained by the other answer

The reason bulk gold solid is largely unreactive is because the electrons in gold fall at energies which few molecules or chemicals match (i.e., due to relativistic effects).

A nice summary of some work by Jens K. Norskov can be found here: http://www.thefreelibrary.com/What+makes+gold+such+a+noble+metal%3F-a017352490

In their experiments, they distinguished between gold atoms' ability to break and form bonds and the ease with which they form new compounds, such as gold oxides. The two qualities are related: To make a compound, gold atoms must bond with other atoms, yet they cannot do so until they have sundered their bonds with neighboring gold atoms.

I think this is a nice succinct explanation. You always have this trade-off in reactions, but in gold, you don't get much energy in the new compound formation, and you're losing the gold-gold interactions.

You can, of course, react gold with aggressive reagents like aqua regia, a 3:1 mix of $\ce{HCl}$ and $\ce{HNO3}$.

If properly done, the product is $\ce{HAuCl4}$ or chloroauric acid.

Solution 2:

Relativistic effects account for gold's lack of reactivity. Gold has a heavy enough nucleus that its electrons must travel at speeds nearing the speed of light to prevent them from falling into the nucleus. This relativistic effect applies to those orbitals that have appreciable density at the nucleus, such as s and p orbitals. These relativistic electrons gain mass and as a consequence, their orbits contract. As these s and (to some degree) p orbits are contracted, the other electrons in d and f orbitals are better screened from the nucleus and their orbitals actually expand.

Since the 6s orbital with one electron is contracted, this electron is more tightly bound to the nucleus and less available for bonding with other atoms. The 4f and 5d orbitals expand, but can't be involved in bond formation since they are completely filled. This is why gold is relatively unreactive.

If you'd like to see the formulas and math behind this (it's not all that complicated) see here. Also note that similar arguments explain mercury's anomalous properties.

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Metal