Ionic Crystals

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Ionic Crystals

Ionic crystals have at least two atoms in their base which are ionized. Charge neutrality
demands that the total charge in the base must be zero; so we always need ions with opposing
charge.
The binding between the ions is mostly electrostatic and rather strong (binding energies
around 1000 kJ/mol); it has no directionality.
Ionic crystals thus can be described as an ensemble of hard spheres which try to occupy a
minimum volume while minimizing electrostatic energy at the same time (i.e. having
charge neutrality in small volumes, too).
There are no free electrons, ionic crystals are insulators.
Ionic crystals come in simple and more complicated lattice types; the latter is true in
particular for oxides which are often counted among ionic crystals. Some prominent lattice
types follow

The NaCl Structure

The lattice is face centered cubic (fcc), with two atoms in the base: one at (0, 0, 0), the other
one at (½, 0, 0)

Many salts and oxides have this structure, e.g. KCl, AgBr, KBr, PbS, ...
or
MgO, FeO, ...
The CsCl Structure

The lattice is cubic primitive with two atoms in the base at (0,0,0) and (½, ½, ½). It is a
common error to mistake it for a bcc lattice.

Intermetallic compounds (not necessarily ionic crystals), but also common salts assume
this structure; e.g.
CsCl, TlJ, ...,
or AlNi, CuZn,

The ZnS (or Diamond, or Sphalerite) Structure

The "zinc blende" lattice is face centered cubic (fcc) with two atoms in the base
at (0,0,0) and (¼, ¼, ¼).
It is not only an important lattice for other ionic crystals like ZnS, which gave it its name,
but also the typical lattice of covalently bonded group IV semiconductors (C(diamond
form), Si, Ge) or III-V compounds semiconductors (GaAs, GaP, InSb, InP, ..)
The ZnS lattice is easily confused with the ZrO2 lattice below.

The CaF2 or ZrO2 Structure

The lattice is face centered cubic (fcc) with three atoms in the base, one kind (the cations)
at (0,0,0), and the other two (anions of the same kind) at (¼, ¼, ¼), and (¼, ¾, ¼).
It is often just called the "fluorite structure".

Perovskite Structure

The lattice is essentially cubic primitive, but may be distorted to some extent and then
becomes orthorhombic or worse. It is also known as the BaTiO3 or CaTiO3lattice and
has three different atoms in the base. In the example it would be Ba at (0,0,0), O at (½,
½, ,0) and Ti at (½, ½, ½).
A particular interesting perovskite (at high pressures) is MgSiO3. It is assumed to form
the bulk of the mantle of the earth, so it is the most abundant stuff on this planet,
neglecting its Fe/Ni core. The mechanical properties (including the movement of
dislocations) of this (and related) minerals are essential for geotectonics - forming the
continents, making and quenching volcanoes, earthquakes - quite interesting stuff!

Spinel Structure

The spinel structure (sometimes called garnet structure) is named after the
mineral spinel (MgAl2O4); the general composition is AB2O4. It is essentially cubic, with
theO - ions forming a fcc lattice. The cations (usually metals) occupy 1/8 of the tetrahedral
sites and 1/2 of the octahedral sites and there are 32 O-ions in the unit cell.
This sounds complicated, but it is not as bad as it could be; look at the drawing. We
"simply" have two types of cubic building units inside a big fcc O-ion lattice, filling
all 8 octants.
The spinel structure is very flexible with respect to the cations it can incorporate; there
are over 100 known compounds. In particular, the A and B cations can mix! In other
words, the composition with respect to one unit cell can be

 (A8) (B16)O32, or
 A8 (B8A8)O32 = A(AB)O4 in regular chemical spelling, or
 (A8/3B16/3) (A16/3B32/3)O32

and so on, with the atoms in the brackets occupying the respective site at random.
A few examples (in regular chemical symbols)

 Magnetite; Fe3+( Fe2+ Fe3+)O4


 Spinel; Mg2+( Al23+)O4
 Chromite; Fe3+(Cr23+)O4
 Jacobsite; Fe3+( Mn2+ Fe3+)O4

The spinel structure is also interesting because it may contain vacancies as regular part
of the crystal. For example, if magnetite is slowly oxidized by lying around a couple of
billion years, or when rocks cool, Fe2+ will turn into Fe3+ (oxidation, in chemical terms,
means you take electrons away). If all Fe2+ is converted into Fe3+, charge balance requires
a net formula of Fe21,67O32 per unit cell and this means that 2,33 sites must be vacant - we
have what is called a defect spinel. In a way, the composition is now Fe21,67Vac2,33O3;
having lots of vacancies as an integral part of the structure.

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