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3.10: Some Properties of Ionic Compounds

  • Page ID
    86198
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    Learning Objectives
    • Describe the basic physical properties of ionic compounds.

    The figure below shows just a few examples of the color and brilliance of naturally occurring ionic crystals. The regular and orderly arrangement of ions in the crystal lattice is responsible for the various shapes of these crystals, while transition metal ions give rise to the colors.

    CK12 Screenshot 8-9-1.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): In nature, the ordered arrangement of ionic solids gives rise to beautiful crystals. (A) Amethyst - a form of quartz, SiO2, whose purple color comes from iron ions. (B) Cinnabar - the primary ore of mercury is mercury (II) sulfide, HgS (C) Azurite - a copper mineral, Cu3(CO3)2(OH)2. (D) Vanadinite - the primary ore of vanadium, Pb3(VO4)3Cl.

    Melting Points

    Because of the many simultaneous attractions between cations and anions that occur, ionic crystal lattices are very strong. The process of melting an ionic compound requires the addition of large amounts of energy in order to break all of the ionic bonds in the crystal. For example, sodium chloride has a melting temperature of about 800 oC. As a comparison, the molecular compound water melts at 0 °C.

    Shattering

    Ionic compounds are generally hard, but brittle. Why? It takes a large amount of mechanical force, such as striking a crystal with a hammer, to force one layer of ions to shift relative to its neighbor. However, when that happens, it brings ions of the same charge next to each other (see below). The repulsive forces between like-charged ions cause the crystal to shatter. When an ionic crystal breaks, it tends to do so along smooth planes because of the regular arrangement of the ions.

    CK12 Screenshot 8-9-2.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\): (A) The sodium chloride crystal is shown in two dimensions. (B) When struck by a hammer, the negatively-charged chloride ions are forced near each other and the repulsive force causes the crystal to shatter.

    Conductivity

    Another characteristic property of ionic compounds is their electrical conductivity. The figure below shows three experiments in which two electrodes that are connected to a light bulb are placed in beakers containing three different substances.

    CK12 Screenshot 8-9-3.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{3}\): (A) Distilled water does not conduct electricity. (B) A solid ionic compound also does not conduct. (C) A water solution of an ionic compound conducts electricity well.

    In the first beaker, distilled water does not conduct a current because water is a molecular compound. In the second beaker, solid sodium chloride also does not conduct a current. Despite being ionic and thus composed of charged particles, the solid crystal lattice does not allow the ions to move between the electrodes. Mobile charged particles are required for the circuit to be complete and the light bulb to light up. In the third beaker, the NaCl has been dissolved into the distilled water. Now the crystal lattice has been broken apart and the individual positive and negative ions can move.

    Example \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Write the dissociation equation of solid NaCl in water.

    Solution

    NaCl(s) → Na+(aq) + Cl(aq)

    Exercise \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Write the dissociation equation of solid NH4NO3 in water.

    Answer

    NH4NO3(s) → NH4+(aq) + NO3(aq)

    Key Takeaways

    • Ionic compounds have high melting points.
    • Ionic compounds are hard and brittle.
    • Ionic compounds dissociate into ions when dissolved in water.
    • Solutions of ionic compounds and melted ionic compounds conduct electricity, but solid materials do not.
    • An ionic compound can be identified by its chemical formula: metal + nonmetal or polyatomic ions.

    Contributors and Attributions

    • CK-12 Foundation by Sharon Bewick, Richard Parsons, Therese Forsythe, Shonna Robinson, and Jean Dupon.

    3.10: Some Properties of Ionic Compounds is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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