Materials for Biomedical Engineering. Mohamed N. Rahaman

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Materials for Biomedical Engineering - Mohamed N. Rahaman


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2.1b). When the atoms forming the covalent bond are the same, such as two hydrogen atoms or two chlorine atoms to form a hydrogen molecule (H2) or a chlorine molecule (Cl2), the bonding electrons are shared equally between the two atoms (Figure 2.5a). However, when the two atoms are different, such as a hydrogen atom and a chlorine atom forming a hydrogen chloride molecule (HCl), the bonding electrons in the covalent bond are not shared equally between the atoms. The chlorine atom has a greater capacity to attract the shared electrons to itself, so due to its higher electronegativity, the shared electrons are attracted more strongly to the chlorine atom than the hydrogen atom (Figure 2.5b). Because of this unequal sharing, the chlorine atom develops a slightly negative character whereas the hydrogen atom develops a slightly positive character. The covalent bond is said to be polar, to consist of a dipole or to have a dipole moment. When appropriate to emphasize the polar nature of the molecule, the more electronegative atom in the bond is shown with a partial negative charge δ symbol while the less electronegative atom is shown with a δ + symbol (Figure 2.5).

Schematic illustration of (a) nonpolar bond in hydrogen molecule (H2) and (b) polar bond in hydrogen chloride molecule (HCl).

      2.4.1 Ionic Bonding

      The electrons in each ion occupy orbitals of complicated shape but, at an approximate level, we can assume that the ions have a spherical shape. Thus, in ionic bonding, one ion can be attracted to the other in any direction and, for the same interatomic distance, the force of attraction does not depend on the direction. We say that that ionic bond lacks directionality or is nondirectional. In packing to form a three‐dimensional structure, one type of ion will surround itself with as many ions of the other type as far as possible to maximize the attraction between cations and anions and to minimize the repulsion between ions of the same charge (Chapter 3). In this way, the attractive potential energy of the system is maximized. Another feature of ionic bonding is that in the creation of ions, an electron transferred from one atom to the other atom remains localized at this second atom and cannot move freely. These features of the ionic bond provide a basis for understanding the characteristic properties of ionic solids (Section 1.4):

       High strength, high elastic modulus, high melting point, and chemically unreactive due to the strong interatomic bonding

       Low electrical and thermal conductivity due to the localized electrons

       Brittleness: Permanent deformation of an ionic solid due to a large enough mechanical force or stress requires motion of ions from their equilibrium sites to adjacent equilibrium sites. For this to occur, ions in one plane of the solid must move over or near to ions of the same sign in the adjacent plane. This leads to a strong repulsion and to catastrophic fracture of the solid into two or more pieces

       High hardness: As hardness is related to the resistance of the material to be permanently deformed, ionic solids typically show high hardness

      Example 2.1

      Sodium chloride (NaCl) and magnesium oxide (MgO) are both ionic solids and they have the same crystal structure. However, MgO has a melting temperature (2800 °C) which is far higher than that of NaCl (801 °C). Explain why.

      Solution:

      Two factors are mainly responsible: (i) the charge of the ions and (ii) the size of the ions, taken as the ionic radius, which determines the equilibrium interatomic spacing.

      1 Charge of the ions: The sodium atom (atomic number = 11; ground state configuration = 1s22s22p63s1) loses one electron to become a sodium ion (Na+) while the chlorine atom (atomic number = 17; ground state configuration = 1s22s22p63s23p5) gains one electron to become a chlorine ion (Cl−). In comparison, the magnesium atom (atomic number = 12; ground state configuration = 1s22s22p63s2) loses two electrons to become a magnesium ion (Mg2+) while the oxygen atom (atomic number = 8; ground state configuration = 1s22s22p4) gains two electrons to become an oxygen ion (O2−). The attractive potential energy (Eq. (2.3)) between the ions depends on the product of the ionic charges. For NaCl, this is (1 × 1) whereas for MgO, this is (2 × 2). Thus, for a given distance of separation, the attractive potential energy for the MgO bond is four times that for the NaCl bond.

      2 Size of the ions: The electronic configuration of the Na+ and Mg2+ ions are the same (1s22s22p6). On the other hand, the Mg2+ ion has a higher nuclear charge than the Na+ ion and, thus, it has a smaller ionic radius due to the greater attraction between the nucleus and the electrons remaining in the ion. The O2− ion has an electronic configuration (1s22s22p6) composed of one less shell than the Cl− ion (1s22s22p63s23p6). Although the oxygen atom gains two electrons to form an O2− ion whereas the chlorine atom gains one electron to form a Cl− ion, it might be expected that the O2− ion will have a somewhat smaller radius due to it having one less electron shell. Thus, the equilibrium interatomic separation of the molecule, taken approximately as the sum of the ionic radii, is smaller in MgO than in NaCl.

      We see from Eq. (2.3) that the potential energy of attraction is proportional to the product of the charges and inversely proportional to the interatomic distance. Thus, based on the ionic charges and interatomic separation, the attractive potential energy at a separation approximating the equilibrium separation distance for MgO is at least four times higher than for NaCl. Although we have not taken into account the repulsive potential energy, Figure 2.2 indicates that it is far smaller than the attractive potential energy. Overall, it will take a much larger amount of energy to disrupt the MgO bond and, thus, the melting point of MgO is much higher than that of NaCl.

      2.4.2 Covalent Bonding

      Covalent bonding involves sharing of electrons between two atoms but the shared electrons are localized between the two atoms and do not move freely. Depending on the number of valence electrons, atoms can each share one or more electrons, giving single, double or triple bonds. Common examples include hydrogen (H2) and chlorine (Cl2) molecules that share one electron each (single bond), oxygen (O2) sharing two electrons each, and nitrogen (N2) molecules sharing three electrons each.

      Hybrid Orbitals


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