px3012 the solid state course coordinator: dr. j. skakle cm3020 solid state chemistry course...

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PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

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Page 1: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

PX3012

The Solid State

Course coordinator:

Dr. J. Skakle

CM3020

Solid State Chemistry

Course coordinator:

Dr. J. Feldmann

Page 2: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

SOLID STATECrystals

Crystal structure basics unit cells symmetry lattices

Some important crystal structures and properties close packed structures octahedral and tetrahedral holes basic structures ferroelectricity

Diffraction how and why - derivation

Page 3: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

Objectives

By the end of this section you should:• be able to identify a unit cell in a symmetrical

pattern• know that there are 7 possible unit cell shapes• be able to define cubic, tetragonal,

orthorhombic and hexagonal unit cell shapes

Page 4: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

Why Solids?

most elements solid at room temperature

atoms in ~fixed position

“simple” case - crystalline solid

Crystal Structure

Why study crystal structures?

description of solid

comparison with other similar materials - classification

correlation with physical properties

Page 5: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

Crystals are everywhere!

Page 6: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

More crystals

Page 7: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

Early ideas• Crystals are solid - but solids are not

necessarily crystalline• Crystals have symmetry (Kepler) and long

range order• Spheres and small shapes can be packed to

produces regular shapes (Hooke, Hauy)

?

Page 8: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

Group discussionKepler wondered why snowflakes have 6 corners,

never 5 or 7. By considering the packing of polygons in 2 dimensions, demonstrate why pentagons and heptagons shouldn’t occur.

Page 9: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

Definitions1. The unit cell

“The smallest repeat unit of a crystal structure, in 3D, which shows the full symmetry of the structure”

The unit cell is a box with:

• 3 sides - a, b, c

• 3 angles - , ,

Page 10: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

Seven unit cell shapes

• Cubic a=b=c ===90°

• Tetragonal a=bc ===90°

• Orthorhombic abc ===90°

• Monoclinic abc ==90°, 90°

• Triclinic abc 90°

• Hexagonal a=bc ==90°, =120°

• Rhombohedral a=b=c ==90°

Think about the shapes that these define - look at the models provided.

Page 11: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

2D example - rocksalt (sodium chloride, NaCl)

We define lattice points ; these are points with identical environments

Page 12: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

Choice of origin is arbitrary - lattice points need not be atoms - but unit cell size should always be the same.

Page 13: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

This is also a unit cell - it doesn’t matter if you start from Na or Cl

Page 14: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

- or if you don’t start from an atom

Page 15: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

This is NOT a unit cell even though they are all the same - empty space is not allowed!

Page 16: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

In 2D, this IS a unit cellIn 3D, it is NOT

Page 17: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

All M.C. Escher works (c) Cordon Art-Baarn-the Netherlands.All rights reserved.

Page 18: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

Examples

The sheets at the end of handout 1 show examples of periodic patterns. On each, mark on a unit cell. [remembering that there are a number of different (correct) answers!]

Page 19: PX3012 The Solid State Course coordinator: Dr. J. Skakle CM3020 Solid State Chemistry Course coordinator: Dr. J. Feldmann

SummarySummary

Unit cells must link up - cannot have gaps between adjacent cells

All unit cells must be identical

Unit cells must show the full symmetry of the structure next section