Giant covalent structures Flashcards

1
Q

What are the boiling points of giant covalent structures

A

Substances that consist of giant covalent structures are solids with very high melting and boiling points.

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2
Q

how are all the atoms linked

A

all the atoms in a giant covalent are linked to other atoms by strong covalent bonds, therefore they have a high melting/boiling point

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3
Q

properties of giant covalent structures

A
  • High melting and boiling points (because of lots of bonds to break)
    -insoluble in water
    -hard
  • do not conduct electricity — because they have no free electron (except for graphite).
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4
Q

what are covalent compounds between

A

non-metals and non-metals

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5
Q

what happens when they bond

A

electrons are shared and bonds are formed. No ions are formed

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6
Q

Examples of giant covalent structures

A

-Diamond
-graphite
-silicon dioxide

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7
Q
A

Diamond

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8
Q
A

Fullerenes

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9
Q
A

Graphite

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10
Q
A

Carbon nanotube

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11
Q

what is this

A

covalent structure

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12
Q

what happens when giant covalent bonds are melted

A

It’s hard to break them since they have many strong bonds. But when they melt, the intermolecular forces break and the atoms split.

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13
Q

Properties of carbon nanotubes

A
  • high tensile strength because of the strong covalent bonds
  • high electrical/ thermal conductivity because one electron form each carbon atom is localised and therefore al of these delocalised electrons can move throughout the whole structure allowing carbon nanotubes to conduct thermal energy
    -high melting and boiling points due to many strong covalent bonds that require lots of energy to break
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14
Q

What is a fullerenes

A

-Molecules of carbon shaped like closed tubes, or hollow balls

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15
Q

What are fullerenes used for

A
  • drug delivery: they can form a structure around an atom or molecule
  • Industrial catalysts: They have a big surface area
  • lubricants: large surface area, due to ration of their nano particles
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16
Q

What is silicon dioxide

A
  • sometimes called silica — it’s what sand is made of
  • each grain of sand is one giant structure of silicon and oxygen
17
Q

What’s a nanotube, describe it’s structure

A
  • Formed from fullerenes and they are tiny carbon cylinders
  • The ration between the length and the diameter of nanotubes is very high
18
Q

What are the properties of nanotubes

A
  • conduct electricity and thermal energy
  • high tensile strength (don’t break when stretched)
19
Q

What can nanotubes be used for

A
  • electronics
  • strengthen materials — because they don’t add much weight, e.g. tennis racket frames