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Radius Determination. GLY 4200 Fall, 2012. X-ray Diffraction Image. Images like these can be used to determine crystal structures. Comparison of Radii. Squashed versus Unsquashed. Left, metallic or covalent radius Right, Van der Waals radius. Radii Across a Row.
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Radius Determination GLY 4200 Fall, 2012
X-ray Diffraction Image • Images like these can be used to determine crystal structures
Squashed versus Unsquashed • Left, metallic or covalent radius • Right, Van der Waals radius
Radii Across a Row • Diagram uses metallic radii for metallic elements, covalent radii for elements that form covalent bonds, and van der Waals radii for those (like the noble gases) which don't form bonds
Coulomb’s Law • F ≃ (Z1Z2)/r2 • where Zi = charge on each ion • r = distance between ions
Covalent Radius Example • Example: • C-C spacing in diamond is 0.154nm • Metallic Si-Si spacing is 0.234nm • C radius = 0.077nm • Si radius = 0.117nm • Si – C = 0.194 nm predicted • 0.193 nm observed
Electron Density Contour Map of LiF • Electron density (electrons/volume) is the preferred method of determining ionic radius • Electron density contour map of LiF: a section through part of the unit cell face • The electron density (electrons A-3) is constant along each of the contour lines
Electron Density Variation • Electron density variation between Li+ and F- • Note the variation has a very flat bottom. • M, G and P indicate the true minimum, and the Goldshmidt and Pauling ionic radii
Ionic Character • Example: CaF • Ca = 1.1 F = 4.1 • Difference = 3.0 Close to 90% ionic • Example: SiN • Si = 1.8 N = 3.1 • Difference = 1.3 28% ionic