Title: Polonium-210 Poisoning
1Polonium-210 Poisoning
(1.0mgPo210Cl2)
(1g/106mg)
(6.02x1023atoms/mol)
(1mol/280gPoCl2)
2.2x1015 atoms
t1/2 138 days by a decay of 5.3MeV energy
10?a few hundred atoms Po-110 per cell
Even if only 10 decay, 1?10 decays per cell
Former Russian spy died 22 days after the
poisoning incident.
The Po210 would decay by a little more than 10
in 22 days.
Chemical Engineering News, Dec. 4, 2006 pg.15
2Chapter 13
- Intermolecular Forces Liquids, and Solids
3WHY?
- Why is water usually a liquid and not a gas?
- Why does liquid water boil at such a high
temperature for such a small molecule? - Why does ice float on water?
- Why do snowflakes have 6 sides?
- Why is I2 a solid whereas Cl2 is a gas?
- Why are NaCl crystals little cubes?
4Inter-molecular Forces
Have studied INTRAmolecular forces the forces
holding atoms together to form molecules.
- Now turn to forces between molecules
- INTERmolecular forces.
- Forces between molecules/atoms, between ions, or
between molecules/atoms and ions.
5(No Transcript)
6Ion-Ion Forces for comparison of magnitude
- NaCl- in salt
- These are the strongest forces.
- Lead to solids with high melting temperatures.
- NaCl, mp 800 oC
- MgO, mp 2800 oC
7Covalent Bonding Forcesfor comparison of
magnitude
8Attraction Between Ions and Permanent Dipoles
- Water is highly polar and can interact with
positive and negative ions to give hydrated ions
in water.
9Attraction Between Ions and Permanent Dipoles
- Many metal ions are hydrated. This is the reason
metal salts dissolve in water.
10Attraction Between Ions and Permanent Dipoles
- Attraction between ions and dipole depends on ion
charge and ion-dipole distance. - Measured by ?H for
- Mn xH2O --gt M(H2O)xn
-1922 kJ/mol
-405 kJ/mol
-263 kJ/mol
11Dipole-Dipole Forces
- Such forces bind molecules having permanent
dipoles to one another.
12Dipole-Dipole Forces
- Influence of dipole-dipole forces is seen in the
boiling points of simple molecules. - Compd Mol. Wt. Boil Point
- N2 28 -196 oC
- CO 28 -192 oC
- Br2 160 59 oC
- ICl 162 97 oC
13Hydrogen Bonding
- A special form of dipole-dipole attraction, which
enhances dipole-dipole attractions.
H-bonding is strongest when X and Y are N, O, or F
14H-Bonding Between Methanol and Water
-?
?
-?
15H-Bonding Between Two Methanol Molecules
-?
?
-?
H-bond
16H-Bonding Between Ammonia and Water
-?
?
-?
H-bond
This H-bond leads to the formation of NH4 and OH-
17Hydrogen Bonding in H2O
- H-bonding is especially strong in water because
- the OH bond is very polar
- there are 2 lone pairs on the O atom
- Accounts for many of waters unique properties.
18Hydrogen Bonding in H2O
- Ice has open lattice-like structure.
- Ice density is lt liquid.
- And so solid floats on water.
19Hydrogen Bonding in Snowflakes
Dr. S. M. Condren
20Hydrogen Bonding in Snowflakes
Dr. S. M. Condren
21Logo for ICE
22Hydrogen Bonding in H2O
- Ice has open lattice-like structure.
- Ice density is lt liquid and so solid floats on
water.
One of the VERY few substances where solid is
LESS DENSE than the liquid.
23A consequence of hydrogen bonding
24Hydrogen Bonding in H2O
- H bonds ---gt abnormally high specific heat of
water (4.184 J/gK) - This is the reason water is used to put out
fires, - it is the reason
lakes/oceans
control climate, - and is the reason
thunderstorms
release huge
amounts of energy.
25Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans
10 months after the storm!
26Boiling Points of Simple Hydrogen-Containing
Compounds
27Methane Hydrate
28Hydrogen Bonding in Biology
- H-bonding is especially strong in biological
systems such as DNA. - DNA helical chains of phosphate groups and
sugar molecules. Chains are helical because of
tetrahedral geometry of P, C, and O. - Chains bind to one another by specific hydrogen
bonding between pairs of Lewis bases. - adenine with thymine
- guanine with cytosine
29Double helix of DNA
Portion of a DNA chain
30Base-Pairing through H-Bonds
31Base-Pairing through H-Bonds
32Discovering the Double Helix
Rosalind Franklin, 1920-1958 X-ray photo that led
to structure
Maurice Wilkins, 1916 - 2004
James Watson (left) 1928- Francis Crick
(right) 1916-2004
1962 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine
33Forces Involving Induced Dipoles
- How can non-polar molecules such as O2 and I2
dissolve in water?
The water dipole INDUCES a dipole in the O2
electric cloud.
Dipole-induced dipole
34Forces Involving Induced Dipoles
- Solubility increases with mass of the gas
Process of inducing a dipole is polarization.
Degree to which electron cloud of an atom or
molecule can be distorted is its polarizability.
35IM Forces Induced Dipoles
- Consider I2 dissolving in ethanol, CH3CH2OH
36Forces Involving Induced Dipoles
- The magnitude of the induced dipole depends on
the tendency to be distorted. - Higher molecular weight ---gt larger induced
dipoles. - Molecule Boiling Point (oC)
- CH4 (methane) - 161.5
- C2H6 (ethane) - 88.6
- C3H8 (propane) - 42.1
- C4H10 (butane) - 0.5
37Boiling Points of Hydrocarbons
- Note linear relation between bp and molar mass.
38Intermolecular Forces Summary
39Liquids
- In a liquid
- molecules are in constant motion
- there are appreciable intermolec. forces
- molecules close together
- Liquids are almost incompressible
- Liquids do not fill the container
40Liquids
- The two key properties we need to describe are
EVAPORATION and its oppositeCONDENSATION
evaporation---gt
Add energy
break IM bonds
make IM bonds
Remove energy
lt---condensation
41Liquids
- At higher T a much larger number of molecules has
high enough energy to break IM forces and move
from liquid to vapor state. - High E molecules carry away E. You cool down when
sweating or after swimming.
Distribution of molecular energies in a liquid.
KE is proportional to T.
42Liquids
- When molecules of liquid are in the vapor state,
they exert a VAPOR PRESSURE
EQUILIBRIUM VAPOR PRESSURE is the pressure
exerted by a vapor over a liquid in a closed
container when the rate of evaporation
rate of condensation.
43Measuring Equilibrium Vapor Pressure
Liquid in flask evaporates and exerts pressure on
manometer.
44Equilibrium Vapor Pressure
45Boiling Point
Liquid boils when its vapor pressure equals
atmospheric pressure.
- When pressure is lowered, the vapor pressure can
equal the external pressure at a lower
temperature.
46Liquids
- If external P 760 mm Hg, T of boiling is the
NORMAL BOILING POINT - VP of a given molecule at a given T depends on IM
forces. Here the VPs are in the order
47Liquids
- HEAT OF VAPORIZATION is the heat required (at
constant P) to vaporize the liquid. - LIQ heat ---gt VAP
- Compd. ?Hvap (kJ/mol) IM Force
- H2O 40.7 (100 oC) H-bonds, dipole,
induced dipole - SO2 26.8 (-47 oC) dipole, induced
dipole - Xe 12.6 (-107 oC) induced dipole
48Liquids
- Molecules at surface behave differently than
those in the interior.
Molecules at surface experience net INWARD force
of attraction. This leads to SURFACE TENSION
the energy required to break the surface.
49Liquids
- Intermolecular forces also lead to CAPILLARY
action and to the existence of a concave meniscus
for a water column.
50Capillary Action
- Movement of water up a piece of paper depends on
H-bonds between H2O and the OH groups of the
cellulose in the paper.
51Metallic and Ionic Solids
52Types of Solids
- TYPE EXAMPLE FORCE
- Ionic NaCl, CaF2, ZnS Ion-ion
- Metallic Na, Fe Metallic
- Molecular Ice,
I2 Dipole Ind. dipole - Network Diamond Extended
Graphite covalent
53Phases Diagrams Important Points for Water
- T(C) P(mmHg)
- Normal boil point 100 760
- Normal freeze point 0 760
- Triple point 0.0098 4.58
- Critical point 374 218 atm
54Solid-Vapor Equilibria
- At P lt 4.58 mmHg and T lt 0.0098 C
- solid H2O can go directly to vapor. This process
is called SUBLIMATION - This is how a frost-free refrigerator works.
55CO2 Phase Diagram
56Network Solids
Diamond
Graphite
57Properties of Solids
- 1. Molecules, atoms or ions locked into a
CRYSTAL LATTICE - 2. Particles are CLOSE together
- 3. STRONG IM forces
- 4. Highly ordered, rigid, incompressible
ZnS, zinc sulfide
58Crystal Lattices
- Regular 3-D arrangements of equivalent LATTICE
POINTS in space. - Lattice points define UNIT CELLS
- smallest repeating internal unit that has the
symmetry characteristic of the solid.
59Cubic Unit Cells
There are 7 basic crystal systems, but we are
only concerned with CUBIC.
60Cubic Unit Cells of Metals
Primitive cubic
61Simple Cubic Unit Cell
- Each atom is at a corner of a unit cell and is
shared among 8 unit cells. - Each edge is shared with 4 cells
- Each face is part of two cells.
62Atom Sharing at Cube Faces and Corners
Atom shared in corner --gt 1/8 inside each unit
cell
Atom shared in face --gt 1/2 inside each unit cell
63Number of Atoms per Unit Cell
- Unit Cell Type Net Number Atoms
- SC (Primitive Cubic)
- BCC
- FCC
1
2
4
Primitive cubic
64Atom Packing in Unit Cells
Assume atoms are hard spheres and that crystals
are built by PACKING of these spheres as
efficiently as possible.
65Units Cells for Metals
Primitive cubic
66Atom Packing in Unit Cells
67Simple Ionic Compounds
- Lattices of many simple ionic solids are built by
taking a SC (Simple or Primitive Cubic) or FCC
(Face-Centered Cubic) lattice of ions of one type
and placing ions of opposite charge in the holes
in the lattice. - EXAMPLE CsCl has a SC (Primitive Cubic)
lattice of Cs ions with Cl- in the center NOT a
BCC (Body-Centered Cubic) because the ion at the
center of the body is not the same ion as at the
corners.
68Two Views of CsCl Unit Cell
- Lattice can be SC lattice of Cl- with Cs in hole
- OR SC lattice of Cs with Cl- in hole
- Either arrangement leads to formula of 1 Cs and
1 Cl- per unit cell
69NaCl Construction
FCC lattice of Cl- with Na in holes
70Comparing NaCl and CsCl
- Even though their formulas have one cation and
one anion, the lattices of CsCl and NaCl are
different. - The different lattices arise from the fact that a
Cs ion is much larger than a Na ion.
71Face-Centered Cubic
Zinc blende
Diamond
72Common Ionic Solids
- Magnesium silicate, MgSiO3