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Frenkel Defect

  • Page ID
    2530
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    The Frenkel defect (also known as the Frenkel pair/disorder) is a defect in the lattice crystal where an atom or ion occupies a normally vacant site other than its own. As a result the atom or ion leaves its own lattice site vacant.

    The Frenkel Defect in a Molecule

    The Frenkel Defect explains a defect in the molecule where an atom or ion (normally the cation) leaves its own lattice site vacant and instead occupies a normally vacant site (Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\)). The cation leaves its own lattice site open and places itself between the area of all the other cations and anions. This defect is only possible if the cations are smaller in size when compared to the anions.

    NaCl_-_Frenkel_defect.jpg
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): The Frenkel defect within the NaCl structure. (CC BY-SA 3.0; VladVD via Wikipedia)

    The number of Frenkel Defects can be calculated using the equation:

    \[ \sqrt{NN^*}\, e^{\frac{\Delta H}{2RT}} \nonumber \]

    where \(N\) is the number of normally occupied positions, \(N^*\) is the number of available positions for the moving ion, the \(\Delta H\) of formation is the enthalpy formation of one Frenkel defect, and \(R\) is the gas constant. Frenkel defects are intrinsic defects because the existence causes the Gibbs energy of a crystal to decrease, which means it is favorable to occur.

    Solids Found with a Frenkel Defect

    The crystal lattices are relatively open and the coordination number is low.

    References

    1. Housecroft, Catherine E., and Alan G. Sharpe. Inorganic Chemistry. 3rd ed. Harlow: Pearson Education, 2008. Print.
    2. Tilley, Richard. Understanding Solids. John Wiley & Sons, LTD. 2004.

    Problems

    1. What requirements are needed in order for the Frenkel defect to occur in an atom?
    2. What are the differences between the Schottky defect and the Frenkel defect?

    Answers

    1. A low coordination number as well as having the crystal lattices open for the molecule.
    2. The Frenkel defect causes an cation to leave its own lattice and go to another, while Sckhotty defect depicts that an equal number of cations and anions must be absent to maintain charge neutraility.

    Contributors and Attributions

    • Stanley Hsia, UC Davis

    Frenkel Defect is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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