Explain Isotopes
This underpins the technique of carbon dating. Constant interchange with the environment makes the ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12 constant in a living tree, for instance, but the ratio drops with time in a predictable way after the tree dies.
If ancient wood has just half the expected “living” value of carbon-14, it must be about 5,700 years old.
Explain Chemical elements
For instance, the far right column contains neon and argon, inert gases that don’t easily form compounds. That’s because they have the same configurations of outer electrons, the key factor in chemical properties.
Explain allotropes
For example, oxygen in the Earth’s atmosphere exists as two allotropes—stable diatomic oxygen (O2) and ozone (O3).
Fullerenes are spheres (“buckyballs”) or tubes of carbon atoms, including the soccer-ball-shaped molecule C60.
Diamond is the hardest known mineral in nature because each carbon atom is bonded rigidly to four other carbons in a tetrahedron;
graphite is relatively soft because the flat sheets are weakly bonded and can slide over each other.
While normal diatomic oxygen forms a colorless, odorless gas, ozone is a pale blue gas with a pungent smell.
Explain solutions and compounds
Explain chemical bonds
Hydrogen molecules form because two hydrogen atoms join up to share their outer electrons and attain full valence shells.
Oxygen has two electron vacancies in its valence shell, so it covalently bonds to two hydrogen atoms to form water.
The sodium and chloride ions then have opposite electrical charge, and the electrostatic force between them holds the molecule together.
Explain Chemical reactions
For example, methane or natural gas burns in oxygen to form water vapor and carbon dioxide.
Explain acids and bases
An example of an acid is hydrochloric acid, which forms when hydrogen chloride (H+Cl–) dissolves in water and the bonds between the hydrogen and chloride ions break, liberating free positive hydrogen ions.
Likewise, dissolved sodium hydroxide (Na+OH–) creates an alkaline solution.
Perfectly pure water has a neutral pH of 7.
For example, hydrochloric acid reacts with sodium hydroxide to produce water and sodium chloride, common table salt.
Explain electrolysis
For example, molten aluminum oxide can be electrolyzed to produce pure aluminum at the negative electrode, while oxygen bubbles off at the positive electrode.
When plates of copper and zinc are placed in a sulfuric acid solution, current flows between them. The zinc electrode gives up electrons that flow along a wire to a copper plate. Once there, they combine with hydrogen ions to liberate hydrogen gas.
Many modern batteries use a paste of potassium hydroxide as their electrolyte.
Explain molecular geometry
Examples of simple structures are linear molecules like carbon dioxide (O=C=O) and tetrahedral molecules like methane, which consists of a carbon atom with four hydrogen atoms surrounding it at the corners of a tetrahedron.
Trigonal-bipyramidal molecules are shaped like two pyramids back to back, while octahedral molecules have a shape like an eight-sided solid. Octahedral molecules include the compound sulfur hexafluoride (SF6).
For instance, the sugar fructose is an isomer of glucose—they have the same formula C6H12O6, but their atoms are arranged in different ways.
2.a) Sometimes, two isomers are mirror images of each other, in which case the molecule is said to be “chiral” and the two mirror-image forms are called enantiomers.
Chiral molecules include most amino acids, the building blocks of proteins.
Explain structural formulas
For example, ethanol has the chemical formula C2H6O, but its structural formula is CH3–CH2–OH, indicating that a methyl group (CH3) is attached to the carbon of a methylene group (CH2), which in turn is attached to the oxygen of a hydroxyl group (OH).
Often, “skeletal formulas” are used to describe complex organic molecules, with a hexagon representing the benzene ring C6H6, for instance.
To keep things simple, skeletal formulas don’t label carbon and hydrogen atoms specifically—carbon is assumed to sit at the vertices with as much hydrogen as it needs to use up four bonds.
Explain chemical polarity
Water is an example of a polar molecule. There is an excess of positive charge on the side of the molecule where two hydrogen atoms sit, covalently bonded to oxygen via a shared pair of electrons.
The oxygen also has two unshared electron pairs on the opposite side of the hydrogen atoms, making that side negatively charged.
Water molecules tend to align themselves so that the negatively charged side of one molecule sits next to the positively charged end of an adjacent one.
This creates a weak type of secondary bonding called hydrogen bonding.
These bonds give water a crystal structure when it freezes, and this explains why water ice is less dense than liquid water.
As a result, when ice forms on a lake during a cold winter it floats to the surface, forming an insulating blanket that protects the entire lake from freezing.
Explain molecular engineering or nanotechnology
Explain crystal structures
Table salt, snowflakes, and diamonds are common examples of crystals.
Crystalline rocks can form in solutions or when molten magma cools. For instance, completely crystallized granite forms when magma cools and solidifies very slowly under high pressure.
Common salt forms a face-centered cubic lattice with alternating atoms of sodium and chlorine.
Some crystals can also form more complicated shapes, including double pyramids and eight-faced octahedra.
Scientists often study the structures of crystals by passing X-rays through them and examining the resulting diffraction patterns
Explain metals
A metal’s ability to conduct electricity and heat stems from the fact that its outer electrons are extremely loosely bound to the atoms and readily flow through a metal wire.
Iron and aluminum are the two most common metals on Earth.
Some metals, such as the precious metals platinum and gold, do not react with the atmosphere at all.
Others, including aluminum and titanium, form a thin oxide layer on their surfaces that protects them from further oxidation.
Confusingly, however, astronomers often use the term “metal” to refer to any element in the universe that is heavier than hydrogen or helium.
Explain semiconductors
An example is the NPN transistor, which sandwiches a P-type semiconductor (with an excess of positive holes) between two N-type semiconductors (with an excess of negatively charged electrons).
When an electric current is applied to the “base” input of the transistor, it increases the conductivity of the P-type region, which in turn increases current flow across the transistor from the “collector” to the “emitter.”
Today, transistors are miniaturized on microchips. Semiconductors play vital roles in just about all modern electronic devices.
Explain polymers
Polyvinyl chloride is a polymer similar to polyethylene but also includes chlorine atoms. This rigid polymer is used for pipes, window frames, and vinyl siding for houses. It can be blended with other compounds to make it soft for products such as raincoats and shower curtains.
Explain composites
An example is reinforced concrete, which uses cement to bind rough gravel and sand, often with steel bars running through it for extra strength.
Wood is a natural composite composed of cellulose fibers in a matrix of the complex polymer lignin.
For instance, fiberglass is a plastic matrix reinforced by threads of glass.
Aerospace engineers often build spacecraft with more exotic composite materials designed to withstand extremely low temperatures in Earth orbit or interplanetary space.
Explain nano-materials
A nanoscale coating of titanium dioxide makes windows “self-cleaning.” When the coating absorbs UV sunlight, it breaks down organic dirt.
The coating is also hydrophilic, or water loving, so that rain forms a sheet on the glass rather than individual droplets, keeping the glass evenly clean.
Explain meta-materials
One example is material with the potential to act like the “cloaking” devices that make spaceships or people invisible in sci-fi films.
However, similar materials could be extremely useful in future microscopes for imaging tiny viruses and molecules, because they don’t suffer from the diffraction limit that prevents normal materials from focusing light to a tiny super-sharp spot.