Chem For Engineering Material by Pup Buddies
Chem For Engineering Material by Pup Buddies
Chem For Engineering Material by Pup Buddies
Metallic solids- are held together by a delocalized “sea” of collectively shared valence
electrons. This form of bonding allows metals to conduct electricity. It is also responsible
for the fact that most metals are relatively strong without being brittle.
Ionic solids- are held together by the mutual electrostatic attraction between cations
and anions. Differences between ionic and metallic bonding make the electrical and
mechanical properties of ionic solids very different from those of metals: Ionic solids do
not conduct electricity well and are brittle.
Molecular solids- are held together by the intermolecular forces we studied in Chapter
11: dispersion forces, dipole–dipole interactions, and hydrogen bonds. Because these
forces are relatively weak, molecular solids tend to be soft and have low melting points
Polymers - contain long chains of atoms (usually carbon), where the atoms within a given
chain are connected by covalent bonds and adjacent chains are held to one another
largely by weaker intermolecular forces. Polymers are normally stronger and have higher
melting points than molecular solids, and they are more flexible than metallic, ionic, or
covalent-network solids.
Nanomaterials - are solids in which the dimensions of individual crystals have been
reduced to the order of 1–100 nm. As we will see, the properties of conventional materials
change when their crystals become this small
Structures of Solids
Crystalline Solids -Solids in which atoms are arranged in an orderly repeating pattern are
called crystalline solids. These solids usually have flat surfaces, or faces, that make definite
angles with one another. The orderly arrangements of atoms that produce these faces
also cause the solids to have highly regular shapes (Figure 12.2). Examples of crystalline
solids include sodium chloride, quartz, and diamond.
Amorphous solids- (from the Greek words for “without form”) lack the order found in
crystalline solids. At the atomic level the structures of amorphous solids are similar to the
structures of liquids, but the molecules, atoms, and/or ions lack the freedom of motion
they have in liquids. Amorphous solids do not have the well-defined faces and shapes of
a crystal. Familiar amorphous solids are rubber, glass, and obsidian (volcanic glass).
Unit Cells and Crystal Lattices
Unit Cells- In a crystalline solid, there is a relatively small repeating unit, called a unit cell,
that is made up of a unique arrangement of atoms and embodies the structure of the
solid. The structure of the crystal can be built by stacking this unit over and over in all three
dimensions. Thus, the structure of a crystalline solid is defined by (a) the size and shape of
the unit cell and (b) the locations of atoms within the unit cell.
Crystal lattice-The geometrical pattern of points on which the unit cells are arranged is
called a crystal lattice. The crystal lattice is, in effect, an abstract (that is, not real)
scaffolding for the crystal structure. We can imagine forming the entire crystal structure
by first building the scaffolding and then filling in each unit cell with the same atom or
group of atoms.
It is useful to begin with two-dimensional lattices because they are simpler to visualize
than three-dimensional ones. Figure 12.3 shows a two-dimensional array of lattice points.
Each lattice point has an identical environment. The positions of the lattice points are
defined by the lattice vectors a and b. Beginning from any lattice point, it is possible to
move to any other lattice point by adding together whole-number multiples of the two
lattice vectors.* The parallelogram formed by the lattice vectors, the shaded region in
Figure 12.3, defines the unit cell. In two dimensions the unit cells must tile, or fit together in
space, in such a way that they completely cover the area of the lattice with no gaps. In
three dimensions, the unit cells must stack together to fill all space.
Five Two Dimensional lattices
In a two-dimensional lattice, the unit cells can take only one of the five shapes
shown in Figure 12.4. The most general type of lattice is the oblique lattice. In this lattice,
the lattice vectors are of different lengths and the angle g between them is of arbitrary
size, which makes the unit cell an arbitrarily shaped parallelogram. The square lattice,
rectangular lattice, hexagonal lattice, and rhombic lattice have a unique combination
of g angle and relationship between the lengths of lattice vectors a and b (shown in
Figure 12.4). For a rhombic lattice an alternative unit cell can be drawn, a rectangle with
lattice points on its corners and its center (shown in green in Figure 12.4).
Because of this, the rhombic lattice is commonly referred to as a centered rectangular
lattice. The lattices in Figure 12.4 represent five basic shapes: squares, rectangles,
hexagons, rhombuses (diamonds), and arbitrary parallelograms. Other polygons, such as
pentagons, cannot cover space without leaving gaps, as Figure 12.5 shows.
Centered lattices exist for other types of unit cells as well. For the crystals discussed in this
chapter we need consider only the lattices shown in Figures 12.6 and 12.7.
The lattice by itself does not define a crystal structure. To generate a crystal structure, we
need to associate an atom or group of atoms with each lattice point. In the simplest
case, the crystal structure consists of identical atoms, and each atom lies directly on a
lattice point. When this happens, the crystal structure and the lattice points have
identical patterns. Many metallic elements adopt such structures, as we will see in Section
12.3. Only for solids in which all the atoms are identical can this occur; in other words, only
elements can form structures of this type. For compounds, even if we were to put an
atom on every lattice point, the points would not be identical because the atoms are
not all the same.
In most crystals, the atoms are not exactly coincident with the lattice points. Instead, a
group of atoms, called a motif, is associated with each lattice point. The unit cell contains
a specific motif of atoms, and the crystal structure is built up by repeating the unit cell
over and over. This process is illustrated in Figure 12.8 for a two-dimensional crystal based
on a hexagonal unit cell and a two-carbon-atom motif. The resulting infinite two-
dimensional honeycomb structure is a two-dimensional crystal called graphene, a
material that has so many interesting properties that its modern discoverers won the
Nobel Prize in Physics in 2010. Each carbon atom is covalently bonded to three
neighboring carbon atoms in what amounts to an infinite sheet of interconnected
hexagonal rings.
The crystal structure of graphene illustrates two important characteristics of crystals. First,
we see that no atoms lie on the lattice points. While most of the structures we discuss in
this chapter do have atoms on the lattice points, there are many examples, like
graphene, where this is not the case. Thus, to build up a structure you must know the
location and orientation of the atoms in the motif with respect to the lattice points.
Second, we see that bonds can be formed between atoms in neighboring unit cells and
the bonds between atoms need not be parallel to the lattice vectors.
Metallic Solids
Metallic solids- also simply called metals, consist entirely of metal atoms. The bonding in
metals is too strong to be due to dispersion forces, and yet there are not enough valence
electrons to form covalent bonds between atoms. The bonding, called metallic bonding,
happens because the valence electrons are delocalized throughout the entire solid. That
is, the valence electrons are not associated with specific atoms or bonds but are spread
throughout the solid. In fact, we can visualize a metal as an array of positive ions
immersed in a “sea” of delocalized valence electrons.
A clean metal surface has a characteristic luster. Metals have a characteristic cold
feeling when you touch them, related to their high thermal conductivity (ability to
conduct heat). Metals also have high electrical conductivity, which means that
electrically charged particles flow easily through them. The thermal conductivity of a
metal usually parallels its electrical conductivity. Silver and copper, for example, which
possess the highest electrical conductivities among the elements, also possess the highest
thermal conductivities.
Most metals are malleable, which means that they can be hammered into thin sheets,
and ductile, which means that they can be drawn into wires (Figure 12.10). These
properties indicate that the atoms are capable of slipping past one another. Ionic and
covalent-network solids do not exhibit such behavior; they are typically brittle.
The Structures of Metallic solids
The crystal structures of many metals are simple and can be generated by placing a
single atom on each lattice point. The structures corresponding to the three cubic lattices
are shown in Figure 12.11. Metals with a primitive cubic structure are rare, one of the few
examples being the radioactive element polonium. Body-centered cubic metals include
iron, chromium, sodium, and tungsten. Examples of face-centered cubic metals include
aluminum, lead, copper, silver, and gold.
Notice in the bottom row of Figure 12.11 that the atoms on the corners and faces of a
unit cell do not lie wholly within the unit cell. These corner and face atoms are shared by
neighboring unit cells. An atom that sits at the corner of a unit cell is shared among eight
unit cells, and only 1>8 of the atom is in one particular unit cell. Because a cube has eight
corners, each primitive cubic unit cell contains 11>82 * 8 = 1 atom, as shown in Figure
12.12(a). Similarly, each body-centered cubic unit cell [Figure 12.12(b)] contains two
atoms, 11>82 * 8 = 1 from the corners and 1 at the center of the unit cell. Atoms that lie
on the face of a unit cell, as they do in a face-centered cubic metal, are shared by two
unit cells so that only one-half of the atom belongs to each unit cell. Therefore, a face-
centered cubic unit cell [Figure 12.12(c)] contains four atoms, 11>82 * 8 = 1 atom from
the corners and 11>22 * 6 = 3 atoms from the faces. Table 12.1 summarizes how the
fractional part of each atom that resides within a unit cell depends on the atom’s
location within the cell.
Close Packing
The presence of extra bonds provided by the interstitial component causes the metal
lattice to become harder, stronger, and less ductile. For example, steel, which is much
harder and stronger than pure iron, is an alloy of iron that contains up to 3% carbon. Other
elements may be added to form alloy steels. Vanadium and chromium may be added
to impart strength, for instance, and to increase resistance to fatigue and corrosion.
One of the most important iron alloys is stainless steel, which contains about 0.4% carbon,
18% chromium, and 1% nickel.
Heterogeneous alloys
• The components are not dispersed uniformly.
• Example, Pearlite alloy contains two phases (Figure 12.16) One phase is essentially
pure body-centered cubic iron, and the other is the compound Fe3C, known as
cementite.
• Properties depend on both the composition and the manner in which the solid is
formed from the molten mixture.
• Formed by rapid cooling of a molten mixture
Intermetallic compounds
• Are compounds rather than mixtures
• They have definite properties and their composition cannot be varied
• The atoms are ordered rather than randomly distributed.
• The ordering of atoms generally leads to better structural stability and higher
melting points than what is observed in the constitutional metals.
• These features can be attractive for high temperature applications.
Examples:
• Ni3Al –a major component of jet aircraft engines because of its strength at high
temperature and its low density
• Cr3Pt –coating of razor blades, which adds hardness, allowing the blade to stay
sharp longer
• Nb3Sn –is a superconductor, a substance that, when cooled below a critical
temperature, conducts electricity with no resistance. Superconductors are used in
the magnets in MRI scanners widely employed for medical imaging.
• SmCo5-hexagonal intermetallic compound, used to make the permanent
magnets found in lightweight headsets and high-fidelity speakers.
• LaNi5–used as the anode in nickel-metal hydride batteries
Gold has long been a metal of choice for decorative objects, jewelry, and coins. The
popularity of gold is driven by its unusual color (for a metal), its resistance to many
chemical reactions, and the fact that it can easily be worked. However, pure gold is too
soft for many applications, including jewelry. To increase its strength and hardness, as well
as to modify its color, gold is often alloyed with other metals. In the jewelry trade pure
gold is termed 24 karats. The karat number decreases as the mass percent of gold
decreases. The most common alloys used in jewelry are 14 karats, which is 114>242 * 100
= 58% gold, and 18 karats, which is 118>242 * 100 = 75% gold. The color of gold varies
depending on the metals it is alloyed with. Gold is typically alloyed with silver and/or
copper. All three elements crystallize with a face-centered cubic structure. The fact that
all three elements have similar radii (Au and Ag are nearly the same size; Cu is roughly
11% smaller) and crystallize with the same type of structure make it possible to form
substitutional alloys with nearly any composition. The variations in color of these alloys as
a function of composition are shown in Figure 12.18. Gold alloyed with equal parts silver
and copper (blue dot) takes on the golden yellow color we associate with 18-karat gold
jewelry. Red (14-karat) or rose gold is a copper-rich alloy (red dot). Silver-rich alloys take
on a greenish hue, eventually giving way to silvery-white colors as silver becomes the
majority constituent.
Metallic Bonding
• a type of chemical bonding that arises from the electrostatic attractive force
between conduction electrons (in the form of an electron cloud of delocalized
electrons) and positively charged metal ions. It may be described as the sharing
of free electrons among a structure of positively charged ion.
• Metallic bonding accounts form any physical properties of metals, such as
strength, ductility, thermal and electrical resistivity and conductivity, opacity, and
luster.
electron-Sea Model
A simple model that accounts for some of the most important characteristics of metals is
the electron-sea model, which pictures the metal as an array of metal cations in a “sea”
of valence electrons (Figure 12.20). The electrons are confined to the metal by
electrostatic attractions to the cations, and they are uniformly distributed throughout the
structure. The electrons are mobile, however, and no individual electron is confined to
any particular metal ion. When a voltage is applied to a metal wire, the electrons, being
negatively charged, flow through the metal toward the positively charged end of the
wire.
The high thermal conductivity of metals is also accounted for by the presence of mobile
electrons. The movement of electrons in response to temperature gradients permits
ready transfer of kinetic energy throughout the solid.
Molecular-Orbital Model - gives an accurate picture of the bonding in metals.
Molecular Orbital Theory
1. Atomic orbitals combine to make molecular orbitals that can extend over the
entire
2. molecule.
3. A molecular orbital can contain zero, one, or two electrons.
4. The number of molecular orbitals in a molecule equals the number of atomic
orbitals that combine to form molecular orbitals.
5. Adding electrons to a bonding molecular orbital strengthens bonding, while
adding
6. electrons to antibonding molecular orbitals weakens bonding.
The electronic structures of crystalline solids and small molecules have similarities as well
as differences. To illustrate, consider how the molecular orbital diagram for a chain of
lithium atoms changes as we increase the length of the chain (Figure 12.22). Each lithium
atom contains a half-filled 2s orbital in its valence shell. The molecular orbital diagram for
Li2 is analogous to that of an H2 molecule: one filled bonding molecular orbital and one
empty antibonding molecular orbital with a nodal plane between the atoms. (Section
9.7) For Li4, there are four molecular orbitals, ranging from the lowest-energy orbital,
where the orbital interactions are completely bonding (zero nodal planes), to the highest-
energy orbital, where all interactions are antibonding (three nodal planes).
As the length of the chain increases, the number of molecular orbitals increases.
Regardless of chain length, the lowest-energy orbitals are always the most bonding and
the highest-energy orbitals always the most antibonding. Furthermore, because each
lithium atom has only one valence shell atomic orbital, the number of molecular orbitals
is equal to the number of lithium atoms in the chain. Because each lithium atom has one
valence electron, half of the molecular orbitals are fully occupied and the other half are
empty, regardless of chain length.
electronic Band Structure If the chain becomes very long, there are so many molecular
orbitals that the energy separation between them becomes vanishingly small. As the
chain length goes to infinity, the allowed energy states become a continuous band. For
a crystal large enough to see with the eye (or even an optical microscope), the number
of atoms is extremely large. Consequently, the electronic structure of the crystal is like
that of the infinite chain, consisting of bands, as shown on the right-hand side of.
• The electronic structures of most metals become complicated with more than one
type of atomic orbital on each atom.
• Because each type of orbital can give rise to its own band, the electronic structure
of a solid usually consists of a series of bands.
• The electronic structure of a bulk solid is referred to as a band structure.
The band structure of a typical metal is shown schematically in Figure 12.23. The electron
filling depicted corresponds to nickel metal, but the basic features of other metals are
similar. The electron configuration of a nickel atom is 3Ar44s23d8, as shown on the left
side of the figure. The energy bands that form from each of these orbitals are shown on
the right side.
The 4s, 4p, and 3d orbitals are treated independently, each giving rise to a band of
molecular orbitals. In practice, these overlapping bands are not completely
independent of each other, but for our purposes this simplification is reasonable. The 4s,
4p, and 3d bands differ from one another in the energy range they span (represented
by the heights of the rectangles on the right side of Figure 12.23) and in the number of
electrons they can hold (represented by the area of the rectangles). The 4s, 4p, and 3d
bands can hold 2, 6, and 10 electrons per atom, respectively, corresponding to two per
orbital, as dictated by the Pauli exclusion principle. (Section 6.7) The energy range
spanned by the 3d band is smaller than the range spanned by the 4s and 4p bands
because the 3d orbitals are smaller and, therefore, overlap with orbitals on neighboring
atoms less effectively.
Many properties of metals can be understood from Figure 12.23. We can think of the
energy band as a partially filled container for electrons. The incomplete filling of the
energy band gives rise to characteristic metallic properties. The electrons in orbitals near
the top of the occupied levels require very little energy input to be “promoted” to higher-
energy orbitals that are unoccupied. Under the influence of any source of excitation,
such as an applied electrical potential or an input of thermal energy, electrons move into
previously vacant levels and are thus freed to move through the lattice, giving rise to
electrical and thermal conductivity.
Ionic Solids
• are held together by the electrostatic attraction between cations and anions:
ionic bonds
• The high melting and boiling points of ionic compounds is because of the strength
of the ionic bonds.
• The strength of an ionic bond depends on the charges and sizes of the ions.
• The attractions between cations and anions increase as the charges of the ions
increase.
• NaCl, mpis 801 oC, MgO, mpis 2852 oC
Structures of Ionic Solids
Three common ionic structure types are shown in Figure 12.25. The cesium chloride (CsCl)
structure is based on a primitive cubic lattice. Anions sit on the lattice points at the corners
of the unit cell, and a cation sits at the center of each cell. (Remember, there is no lattice
point inside a primitive unit cell.) With this arrangement, both cations and anions are
surrounded by a cube of eight ions of the opposite type.
The sodium chloride (NaCl; also called the rock salt structure) and zinc blende (ZnS)
structures are based on a face-centered cubic lattice. In both structures the anions sit on
the lattice points that lie on the corners and faces of the unit cell, but the two-atom motif
is slightly different for the two structures. In NaCl the Na+ ions are displaced from the Cl-
ions along the edge of the unit cell, whereas in ZnS the Zn2 + ions are displaced from the
S2 - ions along the body diagonal of the unit cell. This difference leads to different
coordination numbers. In sodium chloride, each cation and each anion are surrounded
by six ions of the opposite type, leading to an octahedral coordination environment. In
zinc blende, each cation and each anion are surrounded by four ions of the opposite
type, leading to a tetrahedral coordination geometry. The cation coordination
environments can be seen in Figure 12.26.
For a given ionic compound, we might ask which type of structure is most favorable. A
number of factors come into play, but two of the most important are the relative sizes of
the ions and the stoichiometry. Consider first ion size. Notice in Figure 12.26 that the
coordination number changes from 8 to 6 to 4 on moving from CsCl to NaCl to ZnS. This
trend is driven in part by the fact that for these three compounds the ionic radius of the
cation gets smaller while the ionic radius of the anion changes very little. When the cation
and anion are similar in size, a large coordination number is favored and the CsCl
structure is often realized. As the relative size of the cation gets smaller, eventually it is no
longer possible to maintain the cation–anion contacts and simultaneously keep the
anions from touching each other. When this occurs, the coordination number drops from
8 to 6, and the sodium chloride structure becomes more favorable. As the cation size
decreases further, eventually the coordination number must be reduced again, this time
from 6 to 4, and the zinc blende structure becomes favored. Remember that, in ionic
crystals, ions of opposite charge touch each other but ions of the same charge should
not touch.
The relative number of cations and anions also helps determine the most stable structure
type. All the structures in Figure 12.26 have equal numbers of cations and anions. These
structure types (cesium chloride, sodium chloride, zinc blende) can be realized only for
ionic compounds in which the number of cations and anions is equal. When this is not the
case, other crystal structures must result.
As the cation/anion ratio goes down, there are fewer cations to surround each anion,
and so the anion coordination number must decrease. The empirical formula of an ionic
compound can be described quantitatively by the relationship.
Molecular Solids
• Consists of atoms or neutral molecules held together by dipole-dipole forces,
• dispersion forces and/ or hydrogen bonds.
• Are soft and have relatively low melting points (usually below 200oC)
• Most substances that are gases or liquids at room temperature form molecular
• solids at low temperatures. Ex. Ar, H2O and CO2
• Molecular shape dictates how efficiently molecules pack together in 3D
• Ex. Benzene (C6H6), is a highly symmetrical planar molecule that has a higher
• melting point than toluene. The lower symmetry of toluene molecules prevents
• them from packing in a crystal as efficiently as benzene molecules.
• the intermolecular forces that depend on close contact are not as effective and
the melting point is lower. In contrast, the boiling point of toluene is higher than
that of benzene, indicating that the intermolecular attractive forces are larger in
liquid toluene than in liquid benzene.
In graphite, [Figure 12.29(b)], the carbon atoms form covalently bonded layers that are
held together by intermolecular forces. The layers in graphite are the same as those in
the graphene sheet shown in Figure 12.8.
Graphite has a hexagonal unit cell containing two layers offset so that the carbon atoms
in a given layer sit over the middle of the hexagons of the layer below. Each carbon is
covalently bonded to three other carbons in the same layer to form interconnected
hexagonal rings. Electrons move freely through the delocalized orbitals, making graphite
a good electrical conductor along the layers (In fact, graphite is used as a conducting
electrode in batteries.)
Graphite is used as a lubricant and as the “lead” in pencils. The enormous differences in
physical properties of graphite and diamond—both of which are pure carbon— arise
from differences in their three-dimensional structure and bonding
• A Conductor is a material that supports a generous flow of change when a
voltage source of limited magnitude is applied aross its terminals.
• An Insulator is a material that offers a very low level of conductivity when a voltage
source is applied across its terminals.
• A Semiconductor is a material that has a conductivity level somewhere between
an insulator and a conductor.
SEMICONDUCTOR DOPING
N-TYPE DOPING
P-TYPE DOPING
What is LED?
The LED is a two-terminal light source that emits light when current flows through it.
The word LED meaning or LED full form is Light Emitting Diode. The LED is a special
type of p-n junction diode which is made of special type doped semiconductor
materials. The LED allows the flow of current in the forward direction and blocks
the current in the reverse direction. When the current flow in the forward direction
then LED releases energy in the form of photons.
60W LUMEN COMPARISON
Polymers
• In 1827 Jons Berzelius coined the word polymer (From the Greek polys, “many”,
and meros “parts”) to denote molecular substances of high molecular weight
formed by the polymerization (joining together) of monomers, molecules with low
molecular weight.
• Natural polymers such as wool, leather, silk and natural rubber.
• Synthetic polymers produced by polymerizing monomers through controlled
chemical reactions.
• Polymers have a backbone of carbon-carbon bonds because carbon atoms
have an exceptional ability to form strong stable bonds with one another.
Plastics are polymeric solids that can be formed into various shapes, usually by the
application of heat and pressure. There are several types of plastics.
Thermoplastics can be reshaped. For example, plastic milk containers are made from the
thermoplastic polymer polyethylene. These containers can be melted down and the
polymer recycled for some other use.
Addition Polymerization
• A type of polymerization in which the monomers are coupled through their multiple
Bonds.
For example, an amine (a compound containing –NH2) reacts with a carboxylic acid
end is reacted with a diacid, a compound with the –COOH group at each end.
For example, the copolymer nylon 6,6 is formed when a diamine that has 6 carbon atoms
and an amino group on each end is reacted with adipic acid, which also has 6 carbon
atoms.
A condensation reaction occurs on each end of the diamine and the acid. Water is
released, and N-C bonds are formed between molecules
Condensation of Polymers
“Foam” furniture
stuffing, spray-on
Polyurethane insulation, automotive
parts, footwear, water-
protective coatings.
Home furnishings,
Nylon 6,6 apparel, carpet, fishing
line, toothbrush bristles.
Shatterproof eyeglass
lenses, CDs, DVDs,
Polycarbonate bulletproof windows,
greenhouses.
Recycling of Plastics
• The C-C single bonds that forms the chain in polymers are flexible. (Figure 12.39).
• Both synthetic and natural polymers commonly consist of a collection of
macromolecules (large molecules) of different molecular weights.
• Polymers are largely amorphous (nanocrystalline) materials that soften over a
range of temperatures.
• They may possess short range order in some regions of the solid, with chains lined
up in regular arrays (Figure 12.40).
These test results show that the mechanical strength of the polymer increases with
increased crystallinity. The physical units for the stiffness test are psi * 10 -3 (1psi = pounds
per square inch); those for the yield stress test are psi. Discussion of the exact meaning
and significance of these tests is beyond the scope of this text.
Natural rubber is not a useful polymer because it is too soft and too chemically
reactive. Goodyear accidentally discovered that adding sulfur and then heating the
mixture make the rubber harder and reduce its susceptibility to oxidation and other
chemical degradation reactions. The sulfur changes rubber into a thermosetting polymer
by cross-linking the polymer chains through reactions at some of the double bonds, as
shown schematically in Figure 12.42(b). Cross-linking of about 5% of the double bonds
creates a flexible, resilient rubber. When the rubber is stretched, the cross-links help
prevent the chains from slipping, so that the rubber retains its elasticity. Because heating
was an important step in his process, Goodyear named it after Vulcan, the Roman god
of fire.
Nanomaterials
Figure 12.44. Cd3P2 powders with different particle sizes. The arrow indicates decreasing
particle size and a corresponding increase in the band gap energy, resulting in different
colors.
• Some semiconductor devices can emit light when a voltage is applied.
• Another way for it to emit light is to illuminate them with light whose photons have
energies larger than the energy of the band gap of the semiconductor, a process
called photoluminescence.
As the size of the quantum dots decreases, does the wavelength of the emitted light
increase or decrease?
Quantum dots are being explored for applications ranging from electronics to
lasers to medical imaging because they are very bright, very stable, and small enough
to be taken up by living cells even after being coated with a biocompatible surface
layer.
We have seen that elemental carbon is quite versatile. In its bulk sp3-hybridized
solid-state form, it is diamond; in its bulk sp2-hybridized solid-state form, it is graphite. Over
the past three decades, scientists have discovered that sp2-hybridized carbon can also
form discrete molecules, one-dimensional nanoscale tubes, and two-dimensional
nanoscale sheets. Each of these forms of carbon shows very interesting properties.
Until the mid-1980s, pure solid carbon was thought to exist in only two forms: the
covalent-network solids diamond and graphite. In 1985, however, a group of researchers
led by Richard Smalley and Robert Curl of Rice University and Harry Kroto of the University
of Sussex, England, vaporized a sample of graphite with an intense pulse of laser light and
used a stream of helium gas to carry the vaporized carbon into a mass spectrometer.
(Section 2.4, “The Mass Spectrometer”) The mass spectrum showed peaks corresponding
to clusters of carbon atoms, with a particularly strong peak corresponding to molecules
composed of 60 carbon atoms, C60.
Because C60 clusters were so preferentially formed, the group proposed a radically
different form of carbon, namely, nearly spherical C60 molecules. They proposed that the
carbon atoms of C60 form a “ball” with 32 faces, 12 of them pentagons and 20 hexagons
(Figure 12.49), exactly like a soccer ball. The shape of this molecule is reminiscent of the
geodesic dome invented by the U.S. engineer and philosopher R. Buckminster Fuller, so
C60 was whimsically named “buckminsterfullerene,” or “buckyball” for short. Since the
discovery of C60, other related molecules made of pure carbon have been discovered.
These molecules are now known as fullerenes.
Soon after the discovery of C60, chemists discovered carbon nanotubes (Figure
12.50). You can think of these as sheets of graphite rolled up and capped at one or both
ends by half of a C60 molecule. Carbon nanotubes are made in a manner similar to that
used to make C60. They can be made in either multiwall or single-walled forms. Multiwall
carbon nanotubes consist of tubes within tubes, nested together, whereas single-walled
carbon nanotubes consist of single tubes. Single-walled carbon nanotubes can be 1000
nm long or even longer but are only about 1 nm in diameter. Depending on the diameter
of the graphite sheet and how it is rolled up, carbon nanotubes can behave as either
semiconductors or metals.
Figure 12.50. Atomic models of carbon nanotubes. Left: “Armchair” nanotube, which
shows metallic behavior. Right: “Zigzag” nanotube, which can be either semiconducting
or metallic, depending on tube diameter.
Graphene