polydentates
Polydentates, or polydentate ligands, are ligands in coordination chemistry that donate multiple pairs of electrons to a single central metal ion. The denticity of a ligand is the number of donor atoms that bind to the metal; ligands with two or more donor atoms are described as bidentate, tridentate, tetradentate, and so on, while monodentate ligands have only one donor site. Ambidentate ligands can coordinate through different atoms but typically only one atom binds at a time.
Common examples illustrate the range of denticities. Ethylenediamine (en) is a classic bidentate ligand, forming five-membered
A key consequence of using polydentate ligands is the chelate effect: complexes formed with multidentate ligands
Applications of polydentates span catalysis, metal separation and recovery, and medical chelation therapy, where strong multidentate