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+. -. +. -. +. -. +. -. +. +. +. +. e-. e-. +. +. +. e-. +. +. +. Types of Primary Chemical Bonds. Isotropic, filled outer shells. Metallic Electropositive: give up electrons Ionic Electronegative/Electropositive Colavent Electronegative: want electrons
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+ - + - + - + - + + + + e- e- + + + e- + + + Types of Primary Chemical Bonds Isotropic, filled outer shells • Metallic • Electropositive: give up electrons • Ionic • Electronegative/Electropositive • Colavent • Electronegative: want electrons • Shared electrons along bond direction Close-packed structures
Review: Common Metal Structures hcp bcc ccp (fcc) ABCABC not close-packed ABABAB • Features • Filled outer shells spherical atom cores, isotropic bonding • Maximize number of bonds high coordination number • High density
Metals • single element, fairly electropositive • elements similar in electronegativity
Ionic Compounds • elements differing in electronegativity anion cation Ceramics
Ionic Bonding & Structures • Isotropic bonding • Maximize packing density • Maximize # of bonds, subject to constraints • Like atoms should not touch • Maintain stoichiometry • Alternate anions and cations
Ionic Bonding & Structures Isotropic bonding; alternate anions and cations – – – – – – + – – + – – – – – – – + – Just barely stable – – Radius Ratio “Rules”
2(rc + RA) 2RA Cubic Coordination: CN = 8 a
2RA rc + RA Cuboctahedral: CN = 12 rc + RA = 2RA rc = RA rc/RA = 1
Ionic Bonding & Structures • Isotropic bonding • Maximize # of bonds, subject to constraints • Like atoms should not touch • ‘Radius Ratio Rules’ – rather, guidelines • Develop assuming rc < RA • But inverse considerations also apply • n-fold coordinated atom must be at least some size • Maintain stoichiometry • Simple AaBb compound: CN(A) = (b/a)*CN(B) • Alternate anions and cations
Radius Ratio Rules sites occur within close-packed arrays common in ionic compounds if rc is smaller than fRA, then the space is too big and the structure is unstable
Local Coordination Structures • Build up ionic structures from close-packed metallic structures • Given range of ionic radii: CN = 4, 6, 8 occur in close-packed structures tetrahedral octahedral
HCP: tetrahedral sites 4 sites/unit cell 2 sites/close-packed atom
HCP: octahedral sites 2 sites/unit cell 1 site/close-packed atom
Sites in cubic close-packed 8 tetrahedral sites/unit cell 2 tetrahedral sites/close-packed atom 4 octahedral sites/unit cell 1 octahedral site/close-packed atom
Summary: Sites in HCP & CCP 2 tetrahedral sites / close-packed atom 1 octahedral site / close-packed atom sites are located between layers: number of sites/atom same for ABAB & ABCABC
Common Ionic Structure Types • Rock salt (NaCl) sometimes also ‘Halite’ • Derive from cubic-close packed array of Cl- • Zinc blende (ZnS) • Derive from cubic-close packed array of S= • Fluorite (CaF2) • Derive from cubic-close packed array of Ca2+ • Cesium chloride (CsCl) • Not derived from a close-packed array • Complex oxides • Multiple cations
Example: NaCl (rock salt) • Cl- ~ 1.81 Å; Na+ ~ 0.98 Å; rc/RA = 0.54 • Na+ is big enough for CN = 6 • also big enough for CN = 4, but adopts highest CN possible • Cl- in cubic close-packed array • Na+ in octahedral sites • Na:Cl = 1:1 all sites filled
Cl Na Rock Salt Structure ccp array with sites shown CN(Cl-) also = 6 RA/rc > 1 Cl- certainly large enough for 6-fold coordination
a R Lattice Constant Evaluation rock salt ccp metal a R 4R = 2 a a = 2(RA + rc) > ( 4/2)RA
Example: ZnS • S2- ~ 1.84 Å; Zn2+ ~ 0.60 – 0.57 Å; • rc/RA = 0.326 – 0.408 • Zn2+ is big enough for CN = 4 • S2- in close-packed array • Zn2+ in tetrahedral sites • Zn:S = 1:1 ½ tetrahedral sites filled • Which close-packed arrangement? • Either! “Polytypism” • CCP: Zinc blende or Sphaelerite structure • HCP: Wurtzite structure
y y z = 0 z = 1 z = ½ z = ½ x x ZnS: Zinc Blende CCP anions as CP atoms fill 4/8 tetr sites S2- x x x x
ZnS: Zinc Blende S2- Zn2+ CN(S2-) also = 4 RA/rc > 1 S2- certainly large enough for 4-fold coordination
Example: CaF2 (Fluorite) • F- ~ 1.3 Å; Ca2+ ~ 1.0 Å; • rc/RA = 0.77 • Ca2+ is big enough for CN = 8 • But there are no 8-fold sites in close-packed arrays • Consider structure as CCP cations • F- in tetrahedral sites • RA /rc> 1 fluorine could have higher CN than 4 • Ca:F = 1:2 all tetrahedral sites filled • Places Ca2+ in site of CN = 8 • Why CCP not HCP? - same reason as NaCl
Fluorite Ca2+ F- CN(F-) = 4 CN(Ca2+) = 8 [target]
CsCl • Cl- ~ 1.8 Å; Cs+ ~ 1.7 Å; • rc/RA = 0.94 • Cs+ is big enough for CN = 8 • But there are no 8-fold sites in close-packed arrays • CsCl unrelated to close-packed structures • Simple cubic array of anions • Cs+ in cuboctahedral sites • RA /rc> 1 chlorine ideally also has large CN • Ca:Cl = 1:1 all sites filled
Cesium Chloride Cl- 1 Cs+/unit cell 1 Cl-/unit cell CN(Cs) = 8 Cs+
Why do ionic solids stay bonded? • Pair: attraction only • Solid: repulsion between like charges • Net effect? Compute sum for overall all possible pairs Madelung Energy Sum over a cluster beyond which energy is unchanged For simple structures Single rij |Z1| = |Z2| a = Madelung constant Can show
Multiple cations Perovskite Capacitors Related to high Tc superconductors Spinel Magnetic properties Covalency Zinc blende Semiconductors Diamond Semiconductors Silicates Minerals Structures of Complex Oxides
Perovskite • Perovskite: ABO3 [B boron] • A2+B4+O3 A3+B3+O3 A1+B5+O3 • CaTiO3 LaAlO3 KNbO3 • Occurs when RA ~ RO and RA > RB • Coordination numbers • CN(B) = 6; CN(A) = • CN(O) = 2B + 4A • CN’s make sense? e.g. SrTiO3 • RTi = 0.61 Å • RSr = 1.44 Å • RO = 1.36 Å above/below A 12 O B RTi/RO = 0.45 RSr/RO = 1.06 http://abulafia.mt.ic.ac.uk/shannon/ptable.php
Tolerance factor close-packed directions A B