William M. White

Geochemistry


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5 pm and a temperature of 298 K (25°C). Though some interaction energies can be much stronger (e.g., CCl4, 2.8 kJ/mol) or weaker (1 J/mol for He), an energy of a few hundred joules per mole is typical of many substances. By comparison, the hydrogen–oxygen bond energy for each H–O bond in the water molecule is 46.5 kJ/mol. Thus, van der Waals interactions are quite weak compared with typical intramolecular bond energies.

      Hydrogen bonds typically have energies in the range of 20–40 kJ/mol. These are much higher than expected for electrostatic interactions alone, and indeed approach values similar to intramolecular bond energies. Thus, there is the suspicion that some degree of covalency is also involved in the hydrogen bond. That is to say, the nonbinding electrons of oxygen are to some degree shared with the hydrogen in another molecule. Hydrogen bonds are perhaps most important in water, where they account for some of the extremely usual properties of this compound, such as its high heat of vaporization, but they can also be important in organic molecules and are present in HF and ammonia as well.

      1.5.5 Molecules, crystals, and minerals

       1.5.5.1 Molecules

Schematic illustration of the (a) Geometry of the water molecule. (b) Hydrogen bonds between water molecules.

      Geometry becomes enormously important for organic molecules and life. For example, C12H22O11 is the chemical formula for both lactose and sucrose, as well as several other disaccharide carbohydrates, but the atoms are stitched together differently and as a result they have quite different properties. Among other things, all adults (and essentially all animals) can readily digest sucrose, but many adult humans (and most adult mammals) cannot digest lactose. In other molecules, even slight variations in structure, for example, a molecular structure and its mirror image can have quite different properties – a topic we'll explore briefly in Chapter 12.

      Molecules are not necessarily static entities. An important feature of some molecules is the ability to dissociate. This is particularly true of both water and carbonic acid, which can give up hydrogen atoms. Acidity reflects the balance between H+ (strictly speaking H3O+) and OH ions; these must be equal in pure water, but a solution of CO2 in water will have an excess of H+ and hence be acidic. These hydrogen ions can also reassociate with their parent molecules and do so when H ions become abundant.

       1.5.5.2 Crystals

      The solid Earth, however, is not made up of molecules. Instead, it is made up almost entirely of minerals. By definition, a mineral is a crystalline solid. Crystals are infinitely repeating lattice structures that define the fixed positions of atoms and the geometric relationships between them (but just as in molecules, atoms vibrate in crystals). Just as the chemical formula of molecule, for example C12H22O11, does not tell us all we need to know about that compound, a chemical formula of a crystal such as quartz, SiO2, does not tell us everything we need to know about that crystal as SIO2 has several polymorphs, such as cristobalite and tridymite. Nothing demonstrates this better than the difference between the two polymorphs of carbon: graphite and diamond, which differ only in the way carbon atoms are bound together.