Abstract

Much of Ken Wade's scientific career was devoted to developing and exploiting the chemistries of boron, aluminium, gallium and indium (the Group 13 elements). He made significant contributions to both experimental and theoretical aspects of the subject and was a highly regarded teacher and attentive research supervisor. Ken was a modest and self-critical man who had a rare ability to recognize patterns in large chemical and molecular structure data sets and express the resulting generalizations in the form of simple rules that experimental chemists could appreciate and use to predict new compounds. Ken was fascinated by the structures of cluster compounds that are based on regular polyhedral shapes. Cluster molecules generally contain groups of metal atoms linked by metal–metal bonds and located on one or more spherical shells. Since the 1960s they have attracted the attention of both academic and industrial chemists. Understanding and predicting their three-dimensional shapes raised a significant intellectual challenge for chemists. The clusters also attracted attention because they occupy an intermediate position between co-ordination compounds based on a single metal atom and the parent metal, which has an infinite number of linked metal atoms. This provided chemists with a unique opportunity to explore the evolution of their electronic and chemical properties as the cluster size increases. Ken was the first to recognize the electronic relationships connecting closo- , nido- , arachno- and hypho - clusters. These clusters are inter-related by the successive removal of vertices from a regular closo- deltahedron, i.e. a polyhedron with all the faces triangular. His ability to connect the structures of these molecules to the number of valence electrons involved in skeletal bonding represented a significant contribution to chemical bonding theories. Ken communicated his conclusions in very clearly written papers and books. This made the complexities of cluster chemistry amenable to many and especially those who did not have a strong background in quantum chemistry. The skeletal electron counting rules, or Wade's Rules, which Ken pioneered, are now very much part of the fabric of modern cluster chemistry and form an important component of modern undergraduate inorganic chemistry courses. Wade's Rules may be applied to main group and transition metal carbonyl clusters as well as clusters containing both main group and transition metal fragments. Besides providing an accessible entry into cluster chemistry for students, the rules have been used creatively by many leading synthetic chemists to discover new classes of compounds.

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