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Chapter 4 Introduction to Nanochemistry. 2 Chapter 4 Periodicity of the Elements Chemical Bonding Intermolecular Forces Nanoscale Structures Practical.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 4 Introduction to Nanochemistry. 2 Chapter 4 Periodicity of the Elements Chemical Bonding Intermolecular Forces Nanoscale Structures Practical."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 4 Introduction to Nanochemistry

2 2 Chapter 4 Periodicity of the Elements Chemical Bonding Intermolecular Forces Nanoscale Structures Practical Applications

3 | SectionChapter | Section 1: Periodicity of the Elements 3 Introduction to Nanochemistry 14 The Elements Periodic Table of the Elements Periodic Trends

4 | SectionChapter | The Elements 4 Periodicity of the Elements 14 Helium Atom −2 Neutrons and 2 protons in the nucleus −2 Electrons moving about the nucleus An Element Is an Atom with a Unique Chemical Identity The Presence of 2 Protons in the Nucleus Is Unique to the Helium Atom −# Neutrons changes — helium isotopes −# Electrons changes — helium ions −# Protons changes — not helium!

5 | SectionChapter | The Elements 5 Periodicity of the Elements 14 Atomic Properties Atomic Structure Quantum Numbers and Electron Configurations

6 | SectionChapter | Atomic Properties 6 Periodicity of the Elements 14 Element Symbol — 1 or 2 Letters Atomic Number — Number of Protons in Element (Z) Mass Number — Number of Protons and Neutrons (A) Isotopes — Elements with Varying Numbers of Neutrons

7 | SectionChapter | Atomic Structure 7 Periodicity of the Elements 14

8 | SectionChapter | Quantum Numbers and Electron Configurations 8 Periodicity of the Elements 14

9 | SectionChapter | Periodic Table of the Elements 9 Periodicity of the Elements 14

10 | SectionChapter | Periodic Table of the Elements 10 Periodicity of the Elements 14 Metals Nonmetals Metalloids

11 | SectionChapter | Periodic Table of the Elements 11 Periodicity of the Elements 14

12 | SectionChapter | Typical Chemical Reactions 12 Periodicity of the Elements 14 1. Metal + Nonmetal → Salt −2 Al (s) + 3 Br 2(g) → 2 AlBr 3(s) 2a. Metal Oxide + Water → Metal Hydroxide −Na 2 O (s) + H 2 O (l) → 2 NaOH (aq) 2b. Nonmetal Oxide + Water → Acid −CO 2(g) + H 2 O (l) → H 2 CO 3(aq) 3. Metal Oxide + Acid → Salt + Water −NiO (s) + H 2 SO 4(l) → NiSO 4(aq) + H 2 O (l)

13 | SectionChapter | Periodic Trends 13 Periodicity of the Elements 14 Atomic Number Atomic Size Ionization Energy Electron Affinity Electronegativity

14 | SectionChapter | Periodic Trends: Atomic Number (Number of Protons in Nucleus) 14 Periodicity of the Elements 14 Increasing atomic number

15 | SectionChapter | Periodic Trends: Atomic Size 15 Periodicity of the Elements 14 Increasing atomic size

16 | SectionChapter | Periodic Trends: Electron Affinity (atom + e — → atom — + energy) 16 Periodicity of the Elements 14 Increasing electron affinity

17 | SectionChapter | Periodic Trends: Ionization Energy (atom + energy → atom + + e — ) 17 Periodicity of the Elements 14 Increasing ionization energy

18 | SectionChapter | Periodic Trends: Electronegativity 18 Periodicity of the Elements 14 Increasing electronegativity

19 | SectionChapter | Section 2: Chemical Bonding 19 Introduction to Nanochemistry 24 Ionic Bonds Covalent Bonds

20 | SectionChapter | Chemical Bonding 20 Introduction to Nanochemistry 24 Ionic Bonds Covalent Bonds

21 | SectionChapter | Electronegativity Values 21 Chemical Bonding 24 Electronegativity Difference Between Atoms − ≳ 1.7 Ionic − ≲ 1.7 Covalent

22 | SectionChapter | Ionic Bonds 22 Chemical Bonding 24 Na + ½ Cl 2 → [ Na + + Cl – ] → NaCl Ca + Cl 2 → [ Ca +2 + Cl – + Cl – ] → CaCl 2

23 | SectionChapter | Covalent Bonds 23 Chemical Bonding 24

24 | SectionChapter | Molecules with Functional Groups 24 Chemical Bonding 24

25 | SectionChapter | Polar Covalent Bonds 25 Chemical Bonding 24 Electronegativity 3.5 Oxygen 2.1 Hydrogen

26 | SectionChapter | Section 3: Intermolecular Forces 26 Introduction to Nanochemistry 34 Dipole-Dipole Interactions Hydrogen Bonding

27 | SectionChapter | Charge Carrier 27 Intermolecular Forces 34 Ions Dipole Induced Dipole

28 | SectionChapter | Dipole Interactions 28 Intermolecular Forces 34

29 | SectionChapter | Hydrogen Bonding 29 Intermolecular Forces 34 Liquid Water Ice

30 | SectionChapter | Hydrogen Bonding: Watson-Crick Base Pairs 30 Intermolecular Forces 34

31 | SectionChapter | Section 4: Nanoscale Structures 31 Introduction to Nanochemistry 44 Polymers and Copolymers Dendrimers Self-Assembled Monolayers Nanoparticles Quantum Dots Carbon Nanotubes Fullerenes

32 | SectionChapter | Polymers and Copolymers 32 Nanoscale Structures 44

33 | SectionChapter | Dendrimers 33 Nanoscale Structures 44

34 | SectionChapter | Self-Assembled Monolayers 34 Nanoscale Structures 44

35 | SectionChapter | Self-Assembled Monolayers 35 Nanoscale Structures 44

36 | SectionChapter | Self-Assembled Monolayers 36 Nanoscale Structures 44 Functional Groups −Layer-by-layer (LbL)/electrostatic self- assembly (ESA) Substrates −Gold Biocompatible Inert −Other metals −Silicon oxides Optical transparency

37 | SectionChapter | Nanoparticles 37 Nanoscale Structures 44 Gold Nanoparticles Quantum Dots

38 | SectionChapter | Gold Nanoparticles 38 Nanoscale Structures 44 1 to >100 nm Uniform Size Distribution Red Color, Not Gold Easily Modified Surface Properties Gold Is Inert in Biological Organisms

39 | SectionChapter | Quantum Dots 39 Nanoscale Structures 44

40 | SectionChapter | Quantum Dots 40 Nanoscale Structures 44

41 | SectionChapter | Carbon Allotropes 41 Nanoscale Structures 44 Carbon NanotubeC 60 Fullerene sp 3 Carbon: Diamond sp 2 Carbon: Graphite, Graphene, Fullerenes, Carbon Nanotubes

42 | SectionChapter | Carbon Nanotubes 42 Nanoscale Structures 44 Multi Walled Nano Tube

43 | SectionChapter | Carbon Nanotubes 43 Nanoscale Structures 44 Exploring Structures −Fibers Typical lengths: 1-100 μm −Containers Adding end caps Enclosing atoms, molecules, C 60 fullerenes Enclosing carbon nanotubes (i.e., multi-walled nanotubes) −Surface modification Via van der Waals interactions Via chemical reactions

44 | SectionChapter | C 60 Fullerenes 44 Nanoscale Structures 44 C 60

45 | SectionChapter | Section 5: Practical Applications 45 Introduction to Nanochemistry 54 Drug Delivery Biological Sensors Solar Cells Nanocatalysts

46 | SectionChapter | Drug Delivery 46 Practical Applications 54 β-cyclodextrancamptothecin

47 | SectionChapter | Drug Delivery 47 Practical Applications 54 60 nm Nanoparticle (m ≈ 17, MW 97 kDa)

48 | SectionChapter | Biological Sensors 48 Practical Applications 54 Selectivity in Biological Matrix −Differentiate among similar biomolecules Sensitivity to Biological Concentrations −Sensitive detectors −Chemical/biological amplification Efficient −Cost effective −Throughput/turnaround time

49 | SectionChapter | Biological Sensors 49 Practical Applications 54

50 | SectionChapter | Solar Cells 50 Practical Applications 54 Current and Potential Applications −Improve efficency >1 Electron per photon Moving electrons between electrodes −Alternatives to silica Polymer matrix −Cost reduction Alternative photon absorbers

51 | SectionChapter | Nanocatalysts 51 Practical Applications 54

52 | SectionChapter | Nanocatalysts 52 Practical Applications 54 Encapsulated Enzyme Particles −Isolatable −Enhanced stability From thermal denaturation From proteolytic enzymes


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