Interatomic Bonding: Chapter 2 Outline
Interatomic Bonding: Chapter 2 Outline
Chapter 2 Outline
Interatomic bonding
First step in understanding material properties
• Atomic Bonding in Solids
Energies vs. Forces
• Periodic Table
Adhesive tape
Gecko
Addis Ababa Institutes of Technology, School of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering3
Introduction To Materials Science, Chapter 2, Atomic Structure -Interatomic Bonding
Atomic Structure
All matter is composed of atoms.
Atomic Structure
Atomic Structure
Atomic Structure
Atomic Structure
Atomic Structure
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Atomic Structure
NOTE!!!
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Atomic Structure
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Atomic Structure
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Atomic Structure
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Charges:
Electrons (-): protons(+) 1.6 × 10-19 Coulombs.
Neutrons are electrically neutral.
Masses:
Protons and Neutrons ~1.67 × 10-27 kg.
Electron 9.11 × 10-31 kg
Atomic weight: A
Weighted average of atomic masses of naturally
occurring isotopes.
Atomic weight of carbon is 12.011 amu.
Atomic weight is often in mass per mole.
A mole
Amount of matter with mass in grams equal to
the atomic mass in amu
(A mole of carbon has a mass of 12 grams).
n = Nav × ρ / A
Calculate the number density for the
following atoms/molecules
Graphite (carbon): ρ = 2.3 g/cm3, A = 12 g/mol
BOHR ATOM
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WAVE MECHANICAL
MODEL OF ATOM
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Addis Ababa Institutes of Technology, School of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering
Introduction To Materials Science, Chapter 2, Atomic Structure -Interatomic Bonding
Electronic Structure
• Electrons have wavelike and particulate
properties.
– This means that electrons are in orbitals defined
by a probability.
– Each orbital at discrete energy level is
determined by quantum numbers.
Quantum # Designation
n = principal (energy level-shell) K, L, M, N, O (1, 2,
3, etc.)
l = subsidiary (orbitals) s, p, d, f (0, 1, 2,
3,…, n -1)
ml = magnetic 1, 3, 5, 7 (-l to +l)
ms = spin ½, -½
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Addis Ababa Institutes of Technology, School of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering
Introduction To Materials Science, Chapter 2, Atomic Structure -Interatomic Bonding
4d
4p N-shell n = 4
3d
4
s
Energy 3p M-shell n = 3
3
s
Adapted from Fig. 2.4,
Callister & Rethwisch
2p 8e.
L-shell n = 2
2
s
1 K-shell n = 1
s
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Addis Ababa Institutes of Technology, School of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering
Introduction To Materials Science, Chapter 2, Atomic Structure -Interatomic Bonding
SURVEY OF ELEMENTS
• Most elements: Electron configuration not stable.
Element Atomic # Electron configuration
Hydrogen 1 1s1
Helium 2 1s2 (stable)
Lithium 3 1s22s1
Beryllium 4 1s22s2
Boron 5 1s22s22p1 Adapted from Table
2.2, Callister &
Carbon 6 1s22s22p2 Rethwisch 8e.
... ...
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Addis Ababa Institutes of Technology, School of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering
Introduction To Materials Science, Chapter 2, Atomic Structure -Interatomic Bonding
Electron Configurations
• Valence electrons – those in unfilled
shells
• Filled shells more stable
• Valence electrons are most available
for bonding and tend to control the
chemical properties
valence electrons
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Addis Ababa Institutes of Technology, School of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering
Introduction To Materials Science, Chapter 2, Atomic Structure -Interatomic Bonding
Electronic Configurations
ex: Fe - atomic # = 26 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3d 6 4s2
3p6
4d valence
4p N-shell n = 4 electrons
3d
4
s
Energy 3p M-shell n = 3
3
s
Adapted from Fig. 2.4,
Callister & Rethwisch
8e.
2p
L-shell n = 2
2
s
1 K-shell n = 1
s
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Addis Ababa Institutes of Technology, School of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering
Introduction To Materials Science, Chapter 2, Atomic Structure -Interatomic Bonding
Elements
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Periodic Table
Electrons in different
shells
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Addis Ababa Institutes of Technology, School of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering
Introduction To Materials Science, Chapter 2, Atomic Structure -Interatomic Bonding
repulsion
Potential Energy, E
attraction
equilibrium
Typical potential between two atoms
Repulsion when they are brought close together
Related to Pauli principle
(As electron clouds overlap energy increases)
a0
Potential Energy
Ut=Ur+Ua
E0
E0 – bond energy
F= dE/da
a0 –equilibrium distance
a0
at a0, dE/da = 0, Fa = Fr
Tensile
(+)
Force
Compressive
(-)
Electron volt –
energy lost / gained when an electron is taken
through a potential difference of one volt.
E=qV
1 eV = 1.6 x 10-19 J
Elements
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donates accepts
electrons electrons
Dissimilar electronegativities
[Ne] 3s2
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Addis Ababa Institutes of Technology, School of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering
Introduction To Materials Science, Chapter 2, Atomic Structure -Interatomic Bonding
Elements
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Chemical Bonds
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Types of Bonding
Primary Bonding: e- are transferred or shared
Strong (100-1000 KJ/mol or 1-10 eV/atom)
Ionic:
Example - Na+Cl
Strong Coulomb interaction between
a positive atom (lost an electron, Na+) and
a negative atom (an extra electron, Cl-)
Metallic:
Atoms lose some electrons from valence band
Those electrons are shared by all the material
Example: NaCl
Na has 11 electrons, 1 more than needed for a full outer
shell (Neon)
Chemical Bonds
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Chemical Bonds
Chemical Bonds
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Chemical Bonds
Electronegativity is an atom’s
affinity for electrons.
Differences in electronegativity
dictate how electrons are
distributed in covalent bonds.
- nonpolar covalent bonds = equal
sharing of electrons
- polar covalent bonds = unequal
sharing of electrons
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Example: Cl2 molecule. ZCl =17 (1S2 2S2 2P6 3S2 3P5)
N’ = 7, 8 - N’ = 1 can form only one covalent bond
polyethylene molecule:
ethylene mer
diamond:
(each C atom has four
covalent bonds with four
other carbon atoms)
Metallic Bonding
Valence electrons are detached from atoms
Spread in an 'electron sea'
that "glues" the “ions” together
ion core
Chemical Bonds
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H H
-
+ +
Dipole
Summary (I)
Summary (II)
Summary (III)
Make sure you understand language and concepts:
Atomic mass unit (amu)
Atomic number
Atomic weight
Bonding energy
Coulombic force
Covalent bond
Dipole (electric)
Electron state
Electronegative
Electropositive
Hydrogen bond
Ionic bond
Metallic bond
Mole
Molecule
Periodic table
Polar molecule
Primary bonding
Secondary bonding
Van der Waals bond
Valence electron