Archive for the ‘Interesting chemistry’ Category
Saturday, July 25th, 2015
I recently followed this bloggers trail; link1 → link2 to arrive at this delightful short commentary on atom-atom bonds in crystals[1] by Jack Dunitz. Here he discusses that age-old question (to chemists), what is a bond? Even almost 100 years after Gilbert Lewis’ famous analysis,[2] we continue to ponder this question. Indeed, quite a debate on this topic broke out in a recent post here. My eye was caught by one example in Jack's article: "The close stacking of planar anions, as occurs in salts of croconic acid …far from producing a lowering of the crystal energy, this stacking interaction in itself leads to an increase by several thousand kJ mol−1 arising from Coulombic repulsion between the doubly negatively charged anions" I thought I might explore this point a bit further in this post.
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References
- J.D. Dunitz, "Intermolecular atom–atom bonds in crystals?", IUCrJ, vol. 2, pp. 157-158, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1107/s2052252515002006
- G.N. Lewis, "THE ATOM AND THE MOLECULE.", Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 38, pp. 762-785, 1916. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja02261a002
Tags:Carbon, Cations, Chemical bond, control search, Croconic acid, crystal energy, crystal structure search, Gilbert Lewis, intermolecular search, Jack Dunitz, overall energy balance, Proton
Posted in Chemical IT, crystal_structure_mining, Interesting chemistry | 1 Comment »
Wednesday, July 8th, 2015
Peter Edwards has just given the 2015 Hofmann lecture here at Imperial on the topic of solvated electrons. An organic chemist knows this species as “e–” and it occurs in ionic compounds known as electrides; chloride = the negative anion of a chlorine atom, hence electride = the negative anion of an electron. It struck me how very odd these molecules are and so I thought I might share here some properties I computed after the lecture for a specific electride known as GAVKIS.[1] If you really want to learn (almost) everything about these strange species, go read the wonderful review by Zurek, Edwards and Hoffmann,[2] including a lesson in the history of chemistry stretching back almost 200 years.
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References
- D.L. Ward, R.H. Huang, and J.L. Dye, "Structures of alkalides and electrides. I. Structure of potassium cryptand[2.2.2] electride", Acta Crystallographica Section C Crystal Structure Communications, vol. 44, pp. 1374-1376, 1988. https://doi.org/10.1107/s0108270188002847
- E. Zurek, P. Edwards, and R. Hoffmann, "A Molecular Perspective on Lithium–Ammonia Solutions", Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 48, pp. 8198-8232, 2009. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.200900373
Posted in Interesting chemistry | 87 Comments »
Friday, May 22nd, 2015
As I have noted elsewhere, Gilbert N. Lewis wrote a famous paper entitled “the atom and the molecule“, the centenary of which is coming up.[1] In a short and rarely commented upon remark, he speculates about the shared electron pair structure of acetylene, R-X≡X-R (R=H, X=C). It could, he suggests, take up three forms. H-C:::C-H and two more which I show as he drew them. The first of these would now be called a bis-carbene and the second a biradical.
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References
- G.N. Lewis, "THE ATOM AND THE MOLECULE.", Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 38, pp. 762-785, 1916. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja02261a002
Tags:Carbene, Carbenes, Chemistry, Cluster chemistry, food, Functional groups, Gilbert N. Lewis, Non-Kekulé molecule, Organic chemistry, Organic compounds
Posted in Chemical IT, Historical, Interesting chemistry | 1 Comment »
Friday, March 20th, 2015
This might be seen as cranking a handle by producing yet more examples of acids ionised by a small number of water molecules. I justify it (probably only to myself) as an exercise in how a scientist might approach a problem, and how it linearly develops with time, not necessarily in the directions first envisaged. A conventional scientific narrative published in a conventional journal tells the story often with the benefit of hindsight, but rarely how the project actually unfolded chronologically.‡ So by devoting 7 posts to this, you can judge for yourself how my thoughts might have developed (and I am prepared to acknowledge this may only serve to show my ignorance).
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Tags:Mt. Everest, scientist
Posted in Interesting chemistry | No Comments »
Tuesday, March 17th, 2015
I do not play poker,‡ and so I had to look up a 5-4-3-2-1(A), which Wikipedia informs me is a 5-high straight flush, also apparently known as a steel wheel. In previous posts I have suggested acids which can be ionised by (probably) 5, 4, 3 or 1 discrete water molecules in the gas phase; now to try to track down a candidate for ionisation by the required two water molecules to form that straight flush.
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Tags:free energy, gas phase, steel wheel
Posted in Interesting chemistry | No Comments »
Sunday, March 15th, 2015
My previous posts have covered the ionization by a small number of discrete water molecules of the series of halogen acids, ranging from HI (the strongest, pKa -10) via HF (weaker, pKa 3.1) to the pseudo-halogen HCN (the weakest, pKa 9.2). Here I try out some even stronger acids to see what the least number of water molecule needed to ionize these might be.
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Tags:Christopher Reed, Ohio, pence
Posted in Interesting chemistry | 3 Comments »
Monday, March 2nd, 2015
HCN is a weak acid (pKa +9.2, weaker than e.g. HF), although it does have an isomer, isocyanic acid or HNC (pka < +9.2 ?) which is simultaneously stronger and less stable. I conclude my halide acid series by investigating how many water molecules (in gas phase clusters) are required for ionisation of this “pseudo-halogen” acid.
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Tags:ionic systems
Posted in General, Interesting chemistry | No Comments »
Saturday, February 14th, 2015
According to Guggemos, Slavicek and Kresin, about 5-6![1]. This is one of those simple ideas, which is probably quite tough to do experimentally. It involved blasting water vapour through a pinhole, adding HCl and measuring the dipole-moment induced deflection by an electric field. They found “evidence for a noticeable rise in the dipole moment occurring at n≈5–6“.
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References
- N. Guggemos, P. Slavíček, and V.V. Kresin, "Electric Dipole Moments of Nanosolvated Acid Molecules in Water Clusters", Physical Review Letters, vol. 114, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.114.043401
Tags:energy, gas phase models, Java, pence, similar energy
Posted in Interesting chemistry, reaction mechanism | 1 Comment »