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Bonding in Minerals

Bonding in Minerals. The Glue That Holds Minerals Together GLY 4200 –Fall, 2012. Types of Bonds. Intramolecular Ionic Covalent Metallic Intermolecular Hydrogen Van der Waals. Definition of Bonding. A chemical bond is an attraction between atoms brought about by:

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Bonding in Minerals

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  1. Bonding in Minerals The Glue That Holds Minerals Together GLY 4200 –Fall, 2012

  2. Types of Bonds • Intramolecular • Ionic • Covalent • Metallic • Intermolecular • Hydrogen • Van der Waals

  3. Definition of Bonding • A chemical bond is an attraction between atoms brought about by: • A sharing of electrons between two atoms or, • A complete transfer of electrons • When a chemical bond is formed, energy is released • Breaking chemical bonds requires energy

  4. Substances Formed by Bonding • When two or more atoms of the same element bond together, a molecule is formed – example, hydrogen H2 • When 2 or more atoms of different elements combine together chemically, a compound is formed – example, water H2O • Most minerals are compounds

  5. Ionic Bonding • Ionic bonding is the result of electrostatic attraction between two oppositely charged ions • Positive ions are formed from metals (usually) and negative ions are usually formed from non-metals

  6. Halite • Halite, NaCl, is a classical example of an ionically bonded substance • The sodium donates an electron to chlorine to complete the eight-electron subshell on chlorine

  7. Physical Properties of Ionically Bonded Crystals • Ionic bonding is non-directional • Ionically bonded minerals may yield ions to solution • Moderate hardness • Fairly high to very high melting points & boiling points • Poor thermal & electrical conductors except near the melting points

  8. Polarization • Polarity is the distortion of the electron cloud of one atom by another. • A standard example is often hydrogen chloride (HCl)

  9. Does Size Affect Polarizing Power? • Yes, and so does electronegativity • The greater the electronegativity, the greater the polarizing power • So for hydrogen halogen compounds: • Bond polarity has a huge hand in determining chemistry

  10. Relative Size of Ions • The size mismatch of the anions and cations is of importance also • If two ions are similar in size, then they exist quite happily • If there is a size mismatch, then is it quite likely that covalent bonding will occur

  11. Size Mismatch • NaCl melts at 801°C, strong attraction between particles in solid lattice structure (Ionic bonding likely) • AlCl3 sublimes (goes from solid to gas not via the liquid phase) at 180°C, so there are no strong attractions present (Covalent bonding likely)

  12. Polarizing Cations • If the cation is small and highly charged, it has a large polarizing power • If the anion is large and has a relatively low charge, then it is said to have a large polarizability • In the first case, the anion is being polarized by the cation • There will be a significant degree of covalent character to the bond

  13. Non-Existent Compounds • There are some ionic compounds that do not exist at all • Aluminum carbonate is an example • The aluminum 3+ cation is so small and highly polarizing that is completely distorts the large CO32- ion into self-decomposition • Instead of Al2(CO32-)3, carbon dioxide is driven off, leaving aluminum oxide

  14. Ionic Bond Nomenclature • Compounds ending in –ide are simple binary compounds containing 2 elements - even if there is no metal • e.g H2S – hydrogen sulfide • Ending in –ate means oxygen is present • e.g. CaS  = calcium sulfide • CaSO4  = calcium sulfate

  15. Ionic Bond Nomenclature II • Ending in –ite less oxygen present than in –ate compounds • e.g. NaS = sodium sulfide • NaSO4 = sodium sulfate • NaSO3 = sodium sulfite

  16. Covalent Bonding • Covalent bonds involve a complete sharing of electrons and occur most commonly between atoms that have partially filled outer shells or energy levels • Thus, if the atoms are similar in electronegativity then the electrons will be shared

  17. Carbon • Carbon forms covalent bonds • The electrons are in hybrid orbitals formed by the atoms involved as in this example: ethane • Diamond is strong because it involves a vast network of covalent bonds between the carbon atoms in the diamond C2H6

  18. Physical Properties of Covalently Bonded Crystals • Covalent bonds are directional and molecules are often formed. • Covalently bonded crystals do not yield ions to solutions, as ionically bond crystals sometimes do • Covalent crystals have very high melting points & boiling points

  19. Octet Rule • The idea that the noble-gas configuration is a particularly favorable one which can be achieved through formation of electron-pair bonds with other atoms is known as the octet rule • Present-day shared electron-pair theory is based on the premise that the s2p6 octet in the outermost shells of the noble gas elements above helium represents a particularly favorable configuration

  20. Basis of Octet Rule • By allowing each nucleus to claim half-ownership of a shared electron, more electrons are effectively “seeing” more nuclei, leading to increased electrostatic attractions and a lowering of the potential energy

  21. Fluorine • Noble gas configuration (in this case, that of neon, s2p6) is achieved when two fluorine atoms (s2p5) are able to share an electron pair,which becomes the covalent bond • Only the outer (valence shell) electrons are involved

  22. Covalent Bonds Between Different Elements • Hydrogen chloride (aka hydrochloric acid) • The hydrogen has a helium structure, and the chlorine an argon structure

  23. Octet Limitations – Light Elements • For the lightest atoms the octet rule must be modified, since the noble-gas configuration will be that of helium, which is simply s2 rather than s2p6 • Thus we write LiH as Li:H, where the electrons represented by the two dots come from the s orbitals of the separate atoms

  24. Octet Limitations – Heavy Elements • The octet rule applies quite well to the first full row of the periodic table (Li through F), but beyond this it is generally applicable only to the non-transition elements, and even in many of these it cannot explain many of the bonding patterns that are observed • The principal difficulty is that a central atom that is bonded to more than four peripheral atoms must have more than eight electrons around it if each bond is assumed to consist of an electron pair • In these cases, we hedge the rule a bit, and euphemistically refer to the larger number of electrons as an “expanded octet”

  25. Metallic Bonding • A metallic bond occurs whenpositive metal ions like Cu+2 or Fe+3 are surrounded by a "sea of electrons" or freely-moving valence electrons. • The valence electrons are not bound to any particular cation, but are free to move throughout the metallic crystal

  26. Sea of Electrons • In the picture, the red circles are metal cations packed in a crystal lattice • The black dots represent the "sea" of freely moving valence electrons 

  27. Minerals with Metallic Bonding • Only native metals display metallic bonding • Alkaline metals are for too reactive to be found uncombined in nature • Only a few minerals, such as gold, silver, copper and the platinum group are metallically bound

  28. Conductivity Properties • Metals are good conductors of electricity • Electric current is a movement of free electrons • Substances with partial metallic bonding may be semiconductors • Metals are good conductors of heat • Heat is transferred by the increased speed of electrons

  29. Flexibility Properties of Metallic Bonding • The model of metallic bonding explains the flexibility properties of metals • Metals are ductile - They can be drawn into wires because electrons are mobile. • Metals are malleable - They can be hammered into sheets due to mobility of electrons • Metals are tenacious – they do not break easily

  30. Electronic Forces in Metals • Strong attraction between positive nuclei and the electrons • The positive ions repel as do the negative electrons • The electrons move constantly, but some electrons will always be between the layers creating an attraction and keeping them attracted to one another

  31. Explanation of Metallic Properties • An impact will allow a shearing effect as there is a degree of repulsion between layers • The sea of electrons allows movement of ions, therefore pure metals are not brittle

  32. Other Physical Properties • Low hardness • Low melting point & boiling point

  33. Optical Properties • Metallically bonded minerals are opaque – • This is often true at very small thicknesses, such as the 30 micron thickness of a thin section • Metallically bonded substance usually show metallic luster • Weathering may make this luster dull Thin section of llanite, a hypabyssal rhyolite porphyry dike – opaque mineral grains are magnetite

  34. Intermolecular Bonds • Bonds which hold molecules together are called intermolecular bonds • In minerals, the concept of a “molecule” is often inapplicable, but the term is still used

  35. Hydrogen Bonding • In some substances, hydrogen is bonded to elements which are quite electronegative, and which possess “lone pairs” of electrons • Examples include water and ammonia • Hydrogen bonding leads to the many anomalous properties of water and ammonia

  36. Hydrogen Bond Image • The δ+ hydrogen is so strongly attracted to the lone pair that it is almost as if you were beginning to form a co-ordinate bond • It doesn't go that far, but the attraction is significantly stronger than an ordinary dipole-dipole interaction

  37. Relative Bond Strength • Hydrogen bonds have about a tenth of the strength of an average covalent bond, and are being constantly broken and reformed in liquid water • If you liken the covalent bond between the oxygen and hydrogen to a stable marriage, the hydrogen bond has "just good friends" status • On the same scale, van der Waals attractions represent mere passing acquaintances!

  38. Relative Boiling Points

  39. Relative Boiling Points • The boiling point of the hydride of the first element in each group is abnormally high • In the cases of NH3, H2O and HF there must be some additional intermolecular forces of attraction, requiring significantly more heat energy to break • These relatively powerful intermolecular forces are described as hydrogen bonds

  40. Water • Each water molecule can potentially form four hydrogen bonds with surrounding water molecules • There are exactly the right numbers of δ+ hydrogens and lone pairs so that every one of them can be involved in hydrogen bonding

  41. Ammonia and Hydrogen Fluoride • In the case of ammonia, the amount of hydrogen bonding is limited by the fact that each nitrogen only has one lone pair • In a group of ammonia molecules, there aren't enough lone pairs to go around to satisfy all the hydrogens • In hydrogen fluoride, the problem is a shortage of hydrogens • In water, there are exactly the right number of each • Water could be considered as the "perfect" hydrogen bonded system

  42. Hydrogen Bonding in Biology • Hydrogen bonding also holds the DNA double helix together • During sexual reproduction, the hydrogen bonds break, allowing each parent to pass on a strand of DNA • The strands recombine to form a new double helix, a combination of genetic material from each parent

  43. Residual Bonding Forces • All molecules experience intermolecular attractions, although in some cases those attractions are very weak • Even in a gas like hydrogen, H2, if you slow the molecules down by cooling the gas, the attractions are large enough for the molecules to stick together eventually to form a liquid and then a solid

  44. Hydrogen and Helium • In hydrogen's case the attractions are so weak that the molecules have to be cooled to 21 K (-252°C) before the attractions are enough to condense the hydrogen as a liquid • Helium's intermolecular attractions are even weaker - the molecules won't stick together to form a liquid until the temperature drops to 4 K (-269°C)

  45. Van der Waals Bonding • There are two types of Van der Waals forces • Dispersion forces are also known as "London forces" (named after Fritz London who first suggested how they might arise) • Dipole-dipole interactions

  46. Electrical Attractions • Attractions are electrical in nature • In a symmetrical molecule like hydrogen, however, there doesn't seem to be any electrical distortion to produce positive or negative parts • But that's only true on average

  47. Distortion of Electron Cloud • The lozenge-shaped diagram represents a small symmetrical molecule - H2, perhaps, or Br2 • The even shading shows that on average there is no electrical distortion

  48. Mobile Electrons • But the electrons are mobile, and at any one instant they might find themselves towards one end of the molecule, making that end δ- • The other end will be temporarily short of electrons and so becomes δ +

  49. Temporary Fluctuating Dipoles • An instant later the electrons may well have moved up to the other end, reversing the polarity of the molecule

  50. Momentary Dipoles • This constant "sloshing around" of the electrons in the molecule causes rapidly fluctuating dipoles even in the most symmetrical molecule • It even happens in monatomic molecules - molecules of noble gases, like helium, which consist of a single atom

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