CHE 132 Lecture Notes - Lecture 39: Intermolecular Force, Zinc Sulfide, Well-Order

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If the current is independent of time: from electricity and magnetism we know that, q = i x t. If we know the current i and the time t for the electrolysis process we can find the number of moles of metal m deposited in the cathode. When the unit cell is repeated over an over (in three dimensions) the entire lattice is reproduced: metallic elements form crystalline solids consisting of ordered arrays of atoms. (pd, They are malleable: nonmetals crystallize as molecular solids (ordered arrays of neutral covalently bonded molecules held together by intermolecular forces. (benzene, acetone, etc. Ionic compounds form crystalline ionic solids in which ions, either monoatomic or polyatomic, are held together by interionic interactions. (nacl, zns, ki, etc. ). They tend to be brittle: molecular solids have melting points that are lower than those of ionic solids: they are held together by comparatively weaker intermolecular interactions than the ion- ion interactions.

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