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UEME 1122 Material Science Tutorial 1

This document contains 10 questions about material science concepts including: 1) The electron configurations of ions in sodium chloride that are identical to inert gases. 2) Why hydrogen fluoride has a higher boiling point than hydrogen chloride despite having a lower molecular weight. 3) Computing the percent ionic character of bonds in various compounds. 4) Calculating the fraction of vacant atom sites for lead at its melting temperature.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
116 views2 pages

UEME 1122 Material Science Tutorial 1

This document contains 10 questions about material science concepts including: 1) The electron configurations of ions in sodium chloride that are identical to inert gases. 2) Why hydrogen fluoride has a higher boiling point than hydrogen chloride despite having a lower molecular weight. 3) Computing the percent ionic character of bonds in various compounds. 4) Calculating the fraction of vacant atom sites for lead at its melting temperature.

Uploaded by

James
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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UEME 1122 Material Science

Tutorial 1
1. Sodium chloride (NaCl) exhibits predominantly ionic bonding. The Na+ and Cl ions have electron
structures that are identical to which two inert gases?
2. Explain why hydrogen fluoride (HF) has a higher boiling temperature than hydrogen chloride
(HCl) (19.4 vs. -85 C), even though HF has a lower molecular weight.
3. Compute the percents ionic character of the interatomic bonds for the following compounds: TiO2,
ZnTe, CsCl, InSb, and MgCl2.
4. Calculate the fraction of atom sites that are vacant for lead at its melting temperature of 327C (600
K). Assume an energy for vacancy formation of 0.52 eV/atom.
5. Atomic radius, crystal structure, electronegativity, and the most common valence are tabulated in
the following table for several elements; for those that are nonmetals, only atomic radii are
indicated.

Which of these elements would you expect to form the following with copper:
(a) A substitutional solid solution having complete solubility
(b) A substitutional solid solution of incomplete solubility
(c) An interstitial solid solution

6. Calculate the composition, in weight percent, of an alloy that contains 218.0 kg titanium, 15 kg of
aluminum, and 10 kg of vanadium.
7. Calculate the unit cell edge length for an 85 wt% Fe15 wt% V alloy. All of the vanadium is in
solid solution, and, at room temperature the crystal structure for this alloy is BCC.
8. For a solid solution consisting of two elements (designated as 1 and 2), sometimes it is desirable to

determine the number of atoms per cubic centimeter of one element in a solid solution, N1, given
the concentration of that element specified in weight percent, C1. This computation is possible
using the following expression:

Where
NA = Avogadros number
1 and 2 = densities of the two elements
A1 = the atomic weight of element 1
Derive the above mentioned equation using text book Equation 4.2 and expressions contained in
text book Section 4.4.
9. For an ASTM grain size of 8, approximately how many grains would there be per square centimeter at:
(a) a magnification of 100,
(b) without any magnification?

10. Cite the relative Burgers vectordislocation line orientations for edge, screw, and mixed
dislocations.

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