IB Chemistry Structure 2 2.1 The Ionic Model 2.1.3
2.1.3

The Ionic Lattice & Enthalpy

Lattice Enthalpy, Coulomb's Law, and Physical Properties.

1. The Giant Ionic Lattice

Ionic compounds form a crystal lattice—a regular, repeating 3D arrangement of ions.

Cation (+) Anion (-)

Coordination Number

The number of nearest neighbors of opposite charge surrounding an ion.

  • NaCl: 6:6 (Octahedral geometry around each atom).
  • CsCl: 8:8 (Cubic geometry).

2. Lattice Enthalpy (\(H_{latt}\))

Definition:

The enthalpy change when one mole of a solid ionic compound is separated into its gaseous ions under standard conditions (Endothermic).

\( NaCl(s) \rightarrow Na^+(g) + Cl^-(g) \quad \Delta H_{latt} = +787 \, kJ/mol \)

3. Trends (Coulomb's Law)

To explain trends in Melting Point and Lattice Enthalpy, use Coulomb's Law:

\( F \propto \frac{Q_1 Q_2}{r^2} \)

Factor A: Charge (Dominant)

Doubling the charge quadruples the force.

  • Compare: MgO (+2/−2) vs NaCl (+1/−1)
  • Product: MgO = 4, NaCl = 1
  • Result: MgO (\(2850°C\)) ≫ NaCl (\(801°C\))

Factor B: Radius (Secondary)

Smaller ions pack closer (\(r\) decreases).

  • Compare: LiF vs KBr
  • Radii: Li⁺ & F⁻ < K⁺ & Br⁻
  • Result: LiF has higher Lattice Enthalpy.

Paper 2 Strategy: Comparing Enthalpies

Problem: Compare the lattice enthalpies of CaO and KCl. Justify your answer.

1. Identify Charges:

2. Identify Radii:

\( Ca^{2+} \) is smaller than \( K^+ \).

Examiner's Markscheme:

  • CaO has a higher lattice enthalpy. [1]
  • Reason (Charge): The charge product of CaO (+2/−2) is greater. [1]
  • Reason (Radius): \( Ca^{2+} \) is smaller, leading to stronger attraction. [1]

4. Physical Properties

Property Observation Explanation
Melting Point High Large energy required to overcome strong electrostatic forces.
Conductivity (Solid) No Ions are held in fixed positions.
Conductivity (Molten) Yes Lattice dissociates; ions are mobile charge carriers.
Brittleness High Stress causes layers to slide → like charges align → repulsion shatters crystal.

Chemistry in Action: Road Salting

Why use Calcium Chloride (\(CaCl_2\)) instead of Salt (\(NaCl\)) in extreme cold?

1. Exothermic Dissolution

\(CaCl_2\) has very high lattice enthalpy, but even higher hydration enthalpy. Dissolving releases heat, melting ice.

2. Van 't Hoff Factor

\(CaCl_2\) dissociates into 3 ions vs 2 for NaCl. Greater freezing point depression.

Check Your Understanding

Q1. Which compound has the highest Lattice Enthalpy?

Q2. Why does solid KBr NOT conduct electricity?

← 2.1.2 The Ionic Bond Next: 2.2 The Covalent Model →