1 / 12

Camosun College GEOS 250 Lectures: 9:30-10:20 M T Th F300 Lab: 9:30-12:20 W F300

Introduction to Mineralogy Dr. Tark Hamilton Chapter 4: Lecture 12 The Chemical Basis of Minerals (Pauling’s Rules). Camosun College GEOS 250 Lectures: 9:30-10:20 M T Th F300 Lab: 9:30-12:20 W F300. Pauling’s Rules. 1: Coordination Principle: all ions in polyhedra

damia
Download Presentation

Camosun College GEOS 250 Lectures: 9:30-10:20 M T Th F300 Lab: 9:30-12:20 W F300

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to MineralogyDr. Tark HamiltonChapter 4: Lecture 12The Chemical Basis of Minerals(Pauling’s Rules) Camosun College GEOS 250 Lectures: 9:30-10:20 M T Th F300 Lab: 9:30-12:20 W F300

  2. Pauling’s Rules • 1: Coordination Principle: all ions in polyhedra • 2: Electrostatic Valency Principle: Σ bonds = charge • 3: Sharing of Polyhedral Elements decreases stability (e.g. corners OK, edges rare or faces empty) • 4: Hi valence & Low C.N. Cations don’t share • 5: Principle of Parsimony (few geometries, common environments, high symmetry)

  3. Pauling Rule 2: Electrostatic Valency Principle ("Bond Strength") • "In a stable ionic structure the charge on an ion is balanced by the sum of electrostatic bond strengths to the ions in its coordination polyhedron" • i.e. A stable ionic structure must be arranged to preserve Local Electroneutrality • (Ions in a crystal are surrounded by ions of opposite charge so as not to produce large volumes of similar charge in the crystal - this maximizes Madelung potential!) • Ion-ion or ion-radical all the same or unstable

  4. 2: Bond Strength (e.v.) = Z+ / C.N. Na+ or F- in NaCl C.N. = 6, e.v. = 1 Octahedral e.b.s. = 1/6 Ca+2 in CaF2 C.N. = 8, e.v. = 2 Cubic e.b.s. = 2/8 = ¼ F- in CaF2 C.N. = 4, e.v. = 1 Tetrahedral e.b.s. = ¼

  5. Only 1 Bond Strength • Uniform Bond Strength – Isodesmic crystals • NaCl Chloride all bonds = 1 (ordinary ionic crystal implied, but preference for C.N.=6 due to Cl- ‘s 3 normal p-orbitals.) • MgAl2O4Aluminate, FeCr2O4Chromrate (mol. radicals?) • Spinels: AB2O4Radicals or Isodesmic? • Mg+2 or Fe2+ , tetrahedral, 2/4 = ½ • Al+3 or Cr+3 , octahedral, 3/6 = ½ • So isodesmic and no radicals! • Different I.R. & valence made up for by varying C.N. • 1 bond strength = 1 uniform energy level throughout

  6. Unequal Bond Strengths • Small highly charged cations form radicals with larger low valence anions, Anisodesmic • (CO3)-2 , (NO3)- , (PO4)-3 , (SO4)-2 , (WO4)-2 • C+4 in Carbonate is 3 C.N. so bond is 4/3 = 1.33 • N+5 in Nitrate is 3 C.N. so bond is 5/3 = 1.67 • S+6 in Sulphate is 4 C.N. so bond is 6/4 = 1.5 • These are more than half of O-2 valence, so O in these groups is more tightly bonded than to Cations • Oxygens much more tightly bonded to core atom (C,N,S,P, W, V, Cr…) than to surrounding cations • These molecular radicals usually persist through melting, decrepitation or mineral-chemical reactions • Carbonatite melts, Apatite-Magnetite melts

  7. Tightly Bonded Radicals (Viva Che!) 2 Lone Pairs 3 Isomers in solutions 1 radical in solid minerals O (-2) C O O 3 Lone Pairs 4 isomers in solutions 1 radical in solid minerals

  8. Pauling Rule 3: Polyhedral Linking • "The stability of structures with different types of polyhedral linking is vertex-sharing > edge-sharing > face-sharing" • effect is largest for cations with high charge and low coordination number • especially large when r+/r- approaches the lower limit of the polyhedral stability • Why? Sharing edges/faces brings ions at the centre of each polyhedron closer together, hence increasing electrostatic repulsions • i.e.disposition of ions of similar charge will be such as to minimize the Electrostatic Energy between them • Linked polyhedra act as a single ionic structural unit

  9. 2+- 4+: Sharing Polyhedral Elements Rare Empty +sites, too much cation repulsion Tetrahedra +4 cations not +3, 1.5 e.v. OK Edge contracts +2 cations Octahedra

  10. Pauling’s Rules 1-4 all: • Tend to maximize cation-anion interactions due to attraction • Tend to minimize cation-cation or anion-anion interactions due to repulsion

  11. #5 - Principle of Parsimony • # of contrasting elements are small because there are few anion or cation sites • Complex compositions tend toward several constituents (cations) in the same kind of site • This is termed solid solution: Fe for Mg, Si for Al, Ca for Na (definite not exact compositions) • Goldschmidt’s rules say ions have to be similar size +/-15% and +/- 1 charge unit

  12. Limited Types of Coordination Halite Octahedral – Na & Cl Cubic – Ca Tetrahedral – F Fluorite Sphalerite Octahedral – empty Tetrahedral - S

More Related