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Announcements ● Exam Friday. ● Review Materials Posted. ● Graded quizzes available outside Dr. Gutow's office. ● If you instructor has not previously arranged.

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Presentation on theme: "Announcements ● Exam Friday. ● Review Materials Posted. ● Graded quizzes available outside Dr. Gutow's office. ● If you instructor has not previously arranged."— Presentation transcript:

1 Announcements ● Exam Friday. ● Review Materials Posted. ● Graded quizzes available outside Dr. Gutow's office. ● If you instructor has not previously arranged to return your lab notebooks they are outside Dr. Gutow's office. To join clicker to class today: – Turn on the Clicker (the red LED comes on). – Push “Join” button followed by “20” followed by the “Send” button (switches to flashing green LED if successful).

2 Review Molecular solids=Isolated molecules held together by intermolecular forces. Network solids – diamond = continuous network of covalent bonds. – Silicates = networks of SiO 4 tetrahedra held together by ionic interactions (ex. minerals and clays). band structure of solids – Conductors, semiconductors and non-conductors. – Shift in band gap caused by small amounts of impurities (ex. yellow diamond). Intro to crystal field splitting in discussion.

3 Some Silicate Gemstones courtesy of Dr. Wacholtz

4 Tourmalines (Na,Ca)(Mg, Fe, Al, Mn, Li) 3 Al 6 (BO 3 ) 3 (Si 6 O 18 )(OH,F) 4

5 Beryls Be 3 Al 2-x (Cr, Fe) x Si 6 O 18

6 Absorbance of Emeralds (fig 10.25)

7 Zn 2+ tetrahedral complexes Courtesy of Dr. Wacholtz Wavelength Transmitted/ reflected ~580 nm~605 nm ~565 nm Wavelength Absorbed (d-d) transition ~600~610 ~640 (note the ligands absorb in the UV to blue range 350-400 nm

8

9 Review-Chapter 9 attractive interactions among molecules: –ion-ion (lattice energy: U=k(Q 1 Q 2 /d), calculation of U from a cycle of reactions ) –ion-dipole –dipole-dipole –dipole - induced dipole –Dispersion

10 Review-Chapter 9 H-bonding –Generally weaker than ion-ion interactions –Stronger than other intermolecular interactions. –Only seen for hydrogens bonded to N, O or F. –Bond to lone pair on another molecule (usually on N, O or F). –Explain very high boiling points for H 2 O, NH 3 and HF Solubility –“like dissolves like” (polar in polar, nonpolar in nonpolar) –Only soluble if dissolved particles lower energy than undissolved solid.

11 Review-Chapter 9 Raoult’s law: P vap = X solv P˚ solv Note: X solv =n solv /(n solv + in solute ) Reading phase diagrams Water’s unusual properties explained primarily by strong directional hydrogen bonding. –expansion on freezing – formation of a meniscus –surface tension – capillary action

12 Review-Chapter 10 Crystalline solids – cubic, bcc and fcc lattices – Volumes of different lattices in terms of radius of atoms: ● V cubic = 8r 3, – In ionic lattices smaller ion usually fits into octahedral or tetrahedral holes small (+) ion < 44% radius of big ion into tetrahedral holes if (+) ion about same size as (-) ion get simple cubic, like CsCl.

13 Review – Chapter 10 Molecular solids=Isolated molecules held together by intermolecular forces. Network solids – diamond = continuous network of covalent bonds. – Silicates = networks of SiO 4 tetrahedra held together by ionic interactions (ex. minerals and clays). band structure of solids – Conductors, semiconductors and non-conductors. – Shift in band gap caused by small amounts of impurities (ex. yellow diamond).

14 Review – Chapter 10 Crystal field theory –Ligands around a transition metal ion cause the d-orbitals to lose their degeneracy. –You are responsible for two ligand arrangements, octahedral tetrahedral –High spin versus low spin states.


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