Solids Metallic Crystals Alloys – mixtures of metals – done to strengthen or make a metal less...

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Solids Metallic Crystals Alloys – mixtures of metals – done to strengthen or make a metal less brittle or subject to oxidation. 2 types Substitutional – when metal atoms are of similar size Interstitial – when one atom is smaller than the other, fills in the spaces between the larger ones Substitution al Intersti tial

description

Solids  Metallic crystals  Interstitial alloys  Incorporate one atom into the existing structure with little change in volume- results in increased density  Increases total attractive forces in the alloy  Usually stronger and harder than original materials

Transcript of Solids Metallic Crystals Alloys – mixtures of metals – done to strengthen or make a metal less...

Page 1: Solids  Metallic Crystals  Alloys – mixtures of metals – done to strengthen or make a metal less brittle or subject to oxidation.  2 types  Substitutional.

Solids

Metallic Crystals Alloys – mixtures of metals – done to

strengthen or make a metal less brittle or subject to oxidation.

2 types Substitutional – when metal atoms

are of similar size Interstitial – when one atom is

smaller than the other, fills in the spaces between the larger ones

Substitutional Interstitial

Page 2: Solids  Metallic Crystals  Alloys – mixtures of metals – done to strengthen or make a metal less brittle or subject to oxidation.  2 types  Substitutional.

Solids

Metallic crystals Substitutional alloy

Silver alloyed with gold, replace one set of attractive forces with an almost equal set of attractive forces with the added metal. Result: alloy has properties that

tend to fall somewhere between the two separate metals

Page 3: Solids  Metallic Crystals  Alloys – mixtures of metals – done to strengthen or make a metal less brittle or subject to oxidation.  2 types  Substitutional.

Solids

Metallic crystals Interstitial alloys

Incorporate one atom into the existing structure with little change in volume- results in increased density

Increases total attractive forces in the alloy

Usually stronger and harder than original materials

Page 4: Solids  Metallic Crystals  Alloys – mixtures of metals – done to strengthen or make a metal less brittle or subject to oxidation.  2 types  Substitutional.

Solids

Ionic Crystals Attraction of a cation and an anion is

the strongest attractive force known in chemistry. Alternating positive & negative

ions Almost all ionic compounds are

solids with rigid crystal structures (lattices)

Take a large amount of lattice energy to separate the ions!