Title: Zumdahls Chapter 10 and Crystal Symmetries
1Zumdahls Chapter 10 and Crystal Symmetries
2Contents
- Intermolecular Forces
- The Liquid State
- Types of Solids
- X-Ray analysis
- Metal Bonding
- Network Atomic Solids
- Semiconductors
- Molecular Solids
- Ionic Solids
- Change of State
- Vapor Pressure
- Heat of Vaporization
- Phase Diagrams
- Triple Point
- Critical Point
3Intermolecular Forces
- Every gas liquifies.
- Long-range attractive forces overcome thermal
dispersion at low temperature. ( Tboil ) - At lower T still, intermolecular potentials are
lowered further by solidification. ( Tfusion ) - Since pressure influences gas density, it also
influences the T at which these condensations
occur. - What are the natures of the attractive forces?
4London Dispersion Forces
- AKA induced-dipole-induced-dipole forces
- Electrons in atoms and molecules can be polarized
by electric fields to varying extents. - Natural electronic motion in neighboring atoms or
molecules set up instantaneous dipole fields. - Target molecules electrons anticorrelate with
those in neighbors, giving an opposite dipole. - Those quickly-reversing dipoles still attract.
5Induced Dipolar Attraction
- Strengths of dipolar interaction proportional to
charge and distance separated. - So weakly-held electrons are vulnerable to
induced dipoles. He tight but Kr loose. - Also l o n g molecules permit charge to
separate larger distances, which promotes
stronger dipoles. Size matters.
6Permanent Dipoles
- Non-polar molecules bind exclusively by London
potential ? R6 (short-range) - True dipolar molecules have permanently shifted
electron distributions which attract one another
strongly ? R4 (longer range). - Gaseous ions have strongest, longest range
attraction (and repulsion) potentials ? R2. - Size being equal, boiling Tpolar gt Tnon-polar
7Strongest Dipoles
- Hydrogen bonding potential occurs when H is
bound to the very electronegative atoms of N, O,
or F. - So H2O ought to boil at about 50C save for the
hydrogen bonds between neighbor water molecules. - Its normal boiling point is 150 higher!
8The Liquid State (Hawaii?)
- The most complex of all phases.
- Characterized by
- Fluidity (flow, viscosity, turbulence)
- Only short-range ordering (solvation shells)
- Surface tension (beading, meniscus, bubbles)
- Bulk molecules bind in all directions but
unfortunate surface ones bind only
hemispherically. - Missing attractions makes surface creation costly.
9Type of Solids
- While solids are often highly ordered structures,
glass is more of a frozen fluid. - Glass is an amorphous solid. without shape
- In crystalline solids, atoms occupy regular array
positions save for occasional defects. - Array composed by stacking of the smallest unit
cell capable of reproducing full lattice.
10Types of Lattices
- While there are quite a few Point Groups and
hundreds of 2D wallpaper arrangments, there are
only SEVEN 3D lattice types. - Isometric (cubic), Tetragonal, Orthorhombic,
Monoclinic, Triclinic, Hexagonal, and
Rhombohedral. - They differ in the size and angles of the axes of
the unit cell. Only these 7 will fill in 3D
space.
11Isometric (cubic)
- Cubic unit cell axes are all
- THE SAME LENGTH
- MUTUALLY PERPENDICULAR
- E.g.,Fools Gold is iron pyrite, FeS2, an
unusual 4 valence.
12Tetragonal
- Tetragonal cell axes
- MUTUALLY PERPENDICULAR
- 2 SAME LENGTH
- E.g., Zircon, ZrSiO4. This white zircon is a
Matura Diamond, but only 7.5 hardness. - Real diamond is 10.
Diamonds are not tetragonal but
rather face-centered cubic.
13Orthorhombic
- Orthorhombic axes
- MUTUALLY PERPENDICULAR
- NO 2 THE SAME LENGTH
- E.g., Aragonite, whose gem form comes from the
secretion of oysters its CaCO3.
14Monoclinic
- Monoclinic cell axes
- UNEQUAL LENGTH
- 2 SKEWED but PERPENDICULAR TO THE THIRD
- E.g., Selenite (trans. the Moon) a fully
transparent form of gypsum, CaSO42H2O
15Triclinic
- Triclinic cell axes
- ALL UNEQUAL
- ALL OBLIQUE
- E.g., Albite, colorless, glassy component of this
feldspar, has a formula NaAlSi3O8. - Silicates are the most common minerals.
16Hexagonal
- Hexagonal cell axes
- 3 EQUAL C2
- PERPENDICULAR TO A C6
- E.g., Beryl, with gem form Emerald and formula
Be3Al2(SiO3)6 - Diamonds are cheaper than perfect emeralds.
17Rhombohedral
_ 3
- Rhombohedral axis
- CUBE stretched (or squashed) along its diagonal.
(abc) - DIAGONAL is bar 3
- rotary inversion
- E.g., Quartz, SiO2, the base for amethyst with it
purple color due to an Fe impurity.
18Identification (Point Symmetry Symbols)
- Lattice Type
- Isometric
- Tetragonal
- Orthorhombic
- Monoclinic
- Triclinic
- Hexagonal
- Rhombohedral
- Essential Symmetry
- Four C3
- C4
- Three perpendicular C2
- C2
- None (or rather i all share)
- C6
- C3
19Classes
- Although theres only 7 crystal systems, there
are 14 lattices, 32 classes which can span 3D
space, and 230 crystal symmetries. - Only 12 are routinely observed.
- Classes within a system differ in the symmetrical
arrangement of points inside the unit cube. - Since it is the atoms that scatter X-rays, not
the unit cells, classes yield different X-ray
patterns.
20Common Cubic Classes
- Simple cubic
- Primitive P
- Body-centered cubic
- Interior I
- Face-centered cubic
- Faces F
- Capped C if only on 2 opposing faces.
21Materials Density
- Density of materials is mass per unit volume.
- Unit cells have dimensions and volumes.
- Their contents, atoms, have mass.
- So density of a lattice packing is easily
obtained from just those dimensions and the
masses of THE PORTIONS OF atoms actually WITHIN
the unit cell.
22Counting Atoms in Unit Cells
- INTERIOR atoms count in their entirety.
- FACE atoms count for only the ½ inside.
- EDGE atoms count for only the ¼ inside.
- CORNER atoms are only 1/8 inside.
23Golds Density from Unit Cell
- Gold is FCC.
- a b c 4.07 Å
- Au atoms in cell
- 1/8 (8) ½ (6) 4
- M 4(197 g) 788 g
- Volume NAv cells
- (4.07?1010 m)3 ? Nav
- 3.90?105 m3 39.0 cc
- ? M / V 20.2 g/cc
24Bravais Lattices
- 7 lattice systems P, I, F, C options
- P atoms only at the corners.
- I additional atom in center.
- C pair of atoms capping opposite faces.
- F atoms centered in all faces.
- Totals 14 types of unit cells from which to
tile a crystal in 3d, the Bravais Lattices. - Adding point symmetries yields 230 space groups.
25New Names for Symmetry Elements
- What we learned as Cn (rotation by 360/n), is
now called merely n. ? 3s a 3-fold axis. - Reflections used to be ? but now theyre m (for
mirror). So mmm means 3 ? mirrors. - In point symmetry, Sn was 360/n and then ? but
now it is just n, still a 360/n but now followed
by an inversion (which is now 1).
26Triclinic Lattice Designation
- Triclinic ? ? ? ? ?
- All 7 lattice systems have centrosymmetry, e.g.,
corner, edge, face, center inversion pts! - Designation 1
- These are inversion points only because the
crystal is infinite! - While all 7 have these, triclinic hasnt other
symmetry operations. - Its 1 means inversion.
27Cubic (isometric) Designation
- The principal rotation axes are 4, but it is
the four 3 axes that are identifying for cubes. - The 4fold axes have an m ? to each.
- Each 3fold axis has a trio of m in which it
lies. All 3 to be shown.
- The cube is m 3 m
- All its other symmetries are implied by these.
3
m
m
28The Three Cubic Lattices
- Where before we called them simple,
body-centered, and face-centered cubics, the are
now P m3m, I m3m, and F m3m, resp. - The cubic has the highest and the triclinic the
lowest symmetry. The rest of the Bravais
Lattices fall in between. - We will designate only their primitive cells.
- It will help when we get to a real crystal.
29Ortho vs. Merely Rhombic
- Orthorhombic all 90 but a ? b ? c. Trivial.
- Its mmm because
- Rhombohedral all ?s but ? 90 a b c
- Its 3m because
m
30Last of the Great Rectangles
- Tetragonal all 90 and a b ? c
- Principle axis is 4 which is ? m
- But it is also to mm
- So it is designated as 4/m mm
- Abbreviated 4/mmm
4
m
m
m
31Natures Favorite for Organics
- Monoclinic
- a ? b ? c
- ? ? 90 lt ?
- Then b is a 2-fold axis and ? to m
- So it is 2/m
- b is a 2 because the crystal is infinite.
m
2
32(finally) Hexagonal
So it is 6/m mm
- Hexagonal refers to the outlined rhomboid (
?120 ) of which there are six around the
hexagon! So a 6 - That 6 has a ? m and two mm.
- m is a mirror because the crystals infinite.
6
m
m
m
33Lattice Notation Summary
- Lattice Type
- Isometric Cubic
- Tetragonal
- Orthorhombic
- Monoclinic
- Triclinic
- Hexagonal
- Rhombohedral
- Crystal Symmetries
- m 3 m ( m4 3 )
- 4 / m mm (4 ? m )
- mmm (m ? m ? m)
- 2 / m ( 2 ? m)
- 1 (invert only)
- 6 / m mm (6 ? m )
- 3 m ( 3 )
34X-ray Crystal Determination
- Since crystals are so regular, planes with atoms
(electrons) to scatter radiation can be found at
many angles and many separations. - Those separations, d, comparable to ?, the
wavelength of incident radiation, diffract it
most effectively. - The patterns of diffraction are characteristic of
the crystal under investigation!
35Diffractions Source
- X-rays have ? ? d.
- X-rays mirror reflect from adjacent planes in the
crystal. - If the longer reflection exceeds the shorter by
n?, they reinforce. - If by (n½)?, cancel!
- 2d sin? n? , Bragg
reinforced
d sin?
36Relating Cell Contents to ?
- Atomic positions replicate from cell to cell.
- Reflection planes through them can be drawn once
symmetries are known. - Directions of the planes are determined by
replication distances in (inverse) cell units. - Interplane distance, d, is a function of the
direction indices (Miller indices).
37Inverse Distances
- The index for a full cell move along axis b is 1.
Its inverse is 1. - That for ½ a cell on b is ½. Its inverse is 2.
- Intersect on a parallel axis is ?! Its inverse
makes more sense, 0. - Shown is (3,2,0)
c
a
b
38Interplane Spacings (cubic lattice)
- Set of 320 planes at right (looking down c).
- Their normal is yellow.
- (h,k,l) (3,2,0)
- Shifts are a/h, b/k, c/l
- Inverses h/a, k/b, l/c
- Pythagoras in inverse!
- d2hkl (h/a)2 (k/b)2 (l/c)2 for use in
Bragg
39Bragg Formula
c
b
a
- 2 sin? / ? 1 / d (conveniently inverted)
- Let the angles opposite a, b, and c be ?, ?, and
?. (All 90 if cubic, etc.) - Then Bragg for cubic, orthorhombic, monoclinic,
and triclinic becomes - 2 sin? / ? (h/a)2 (k/b)2 (l/c)2
2hkcos?/ab 2hlcos?/ac 2klcos?/bc ½
40Unit Cell Parameters from X-ray
- Triclinic
- Monoclinic
- Orthorhombic
- Tetragonal
- Rhombohedral
- Hexagonal
- Cubic
- a ? b ? c ? ? ? ? ?
- a ? b ? c ? ? 90 lt ?
- a ? b ? c ? ? ? 90
- a b ? c ? ? ? 90
- a b c ? ? ? ? 90
- a b c ? ? 90 ? 120
- a b c ? ? ? 90
41New Space Symmetry Elements
- Glide Plane
- Simultaneous mirror with translation to it.
- a, b, or c if glide is ½ along those axes.
- n if by ½ along a face.
- d if by ¼ along a face.
- Screw axis, nm
- Simultaneous rotation by 360/n with a m/n
translation along axis.
cell 2
32 screw
cell 1
a glide
42Systematic Extinctions
- Both space symmetries and Bravais lattice types
kill off some Miller Index triples! - Use missing triples to find P, F, C, I
- E.g., if odd sums hkl are missing, the unit
cell is body-centered and must be I. - Use them to find glide planes and screw axes.
- E.g., if all odd h is missing from (h,k,0)
reflections, then there is an a glide (by ½) ? c. - http//tetide.geo.uniroma1.it/ipercri/crix/struct.
htm
43Natures Choice Symmetries
- 36.0 P 21 / c monoclinic
- 13.7 P 1 triclinic
- 11.6 P 21 21 21 orthorhombic
- 6.7 P 21 monoclinic
- 6.6 C 2 / c monoclinic
- 25.4 All (230 5 ) 225 others!
- 75 these 5 90 only 16 total for organics.
- Stout Jensen, Table 5.1
_
44Packing in Metals
A B A hexagonal close pack
A B C cubic close pack
45Relationship to Unit Cells
Is FCC
A B C cubic close pack
46ABA (hcp) Hexagonal
The white lines indicate an elongated hexagonal
unit cell with atoms at its equator and an offset
pair at ¼ ¾.
If we expand the cell to see its shape, we get a
diamond at both ends3 make a hexagon
whose planes are 90 to the sides of the
(expanded) cell.
47Alloys (vary properties of metals)
- Substitutional
- Heteroatoms swap originals, e.g., Cu/Sn (bronze)
- Intersticial
- Smaller interlopers fit in interstices (voids) of
metal structure, e.g., Fe/C (steels) - Mixed
- Substitutional and intersticial in same metal
alloy, e.g., Fe/Cr/C (chrome steels)
48Phase Changes
- Phase changes mean
- Structure reorganization
- Enthalpy changes, ?H
- Volume changes, ?V
- Solid-to-Solid
- E.g., red to white P
- Solid-to-Liquid
- ?Hfusion significant
- ?Vfusion small
- Solid-to-Gas
- ?Hsublimation very large
- ?Vsublimation very large
- Liquid-to-Gas
- ?Hvaporization large
- ?Vvaporization very large
- All occur at sharply defined P,T, e.g., P 1 bar
Tfusion normal FP
49Heating Curve (1 mol H2O to scale)
Csteam ?T
60
steam heats
water becomes steam
heat (kJ)
?Hvaporization
ice warms
water warms
?Hfusion
Cice ?T
Cwater ?T
ice becomes water
0
0C
100C
T
50Equilibrium Vapor Pressure, Peq
- At a given P,T, the partial pressure of vapor
above a volatile condensed phase. - If two condensed phases present, e.g., solid and
liquid, the one with the lower Peq will be the
more thermodynamically stable. - The more volatile phase will lose matter by gas
transfer to the less (more stable) one because
such equilibrium are dynamic!
51Liquid Vapor Pressures
- Measure the binding potential in the liquids.
- Vary strongly with T since the fraction of
molecules energetic enough at T to break free is
e?Hvap / RT. - Will be presumed ideal.
- Equal 1 bar at normal boiling point, Tboil.
- Decrease as liquid is diluted with another.
52Temperature Dependence of P
- The thermodynamic relationship between Gibbs Free
energy, G, and gas pressure, P, can be shown to
define P as a function of T. - Well see this in Chapter 6.
- PT / PT e?Hvap / RT / e?Hvap / RT or
- Just the ratio of molecules capable of overcoming
?Hvap - P P e ?Hvap / R ? (1/T ) (1/T )
- The infamous Clausius-Clapeyron equation.
53Raoults Law PA varies with XA
- Ideal solutions composed of molecules with AA
binding energy the same as AB. - Vapor pressures are consequence of the
equilibrium between evaporation and condensation.
If evaporation slows, P falls. - But only XA of liquid at surface is A, then its
evaporation rate varies directly with XA. - PA P A XA and PB P B XB
- Where P means P of pure (X1) liquid.
54Consequences of Ideality
- Measured vapor pressures predict mole fractions
(hence concentrations) of solutes. - Pressure solution equilibria predict solute
solution equilibria. - While gases are adequately ideal, solutions
almost never are ideal. - Positive deviations of P from PX imply AB
interactions are not as strong as AA ones.
55Pure Compound Phase Diagram
- Predicts the stable phase as a function of Ptotal
and T. - Characteristic shape punctuated by unique points.
- Phase equilibrium lines
- Triple Point
- Critical Point
P
Liquid
Solid
Gas
T
56Phase Diagram Landmarks
- Triple Point (PT,TT)
- where SLG coexist.
- Critical Point (PC,TC)
- beyond this exist no liquid/vapor property
differences. - P 1 bar
- Normal fusion TF and boiling TB points.
57Inducing Phase Changes
- Below PT or above PC
- Deposition of gas to solid induced by dropping T
or raising P - Sublimation is reverse.
- Between PT and PC
- Liquid condensation vs. vaporization.
- Normally, pressure on liquid solidifies it
(unless ?solid lt ?liquid)
58Impure (solution) Phase Diagram
- Adding a solute to a pure liquid elevates its
Tboil by lowering its vapor pressure. - (Raoults Law)
- It also stabilizes liquid against solid (lowers
Tfusion) - Lower P wins, remember?
- Click to see the new liquid regions and
- 2 colligative properties in 1!
59ClausiusClapeyron Lab Fix
- dP/dT P?Hvap/RT 2
- from thermodynamics
- PPe?H/R(1/T)(1/T )
- But only if ?H ? f(T)
- If ?H a bT
- where b related to CP
- PP(T/T )b/R ea/R(1/T)(1/T )
- assumes only CP are fixed.
- A better approximation.
Clausius Clapeyron
60ClausiusClapeyron Parameters
- ?H a bT
- b (?HBP?H) / (BP298)
- a ?H 298 b
61End of Presentation
- Last modified 30 June 2001