Solid State Chemistry
Across
- 2. One common example of network solids
- 3. It exists as a pure element at room temperature in three different forms: graphite (the most stable form), diamond, and fullerene
- 4. The most important of network covalent solids,which consists of extended arrays of covalently bonded silicon and oxygen atoms
- 8. Which element has a non-polar (covalent) bond?
- 10. What substance is a hydrogen-bonded?
- 14. What type of cubic unit cell has one atom per unit cell?
- 17. What solids include diamond, quartz, many metalloids, and oxides of transition metals and metalloids?
- 19. What type of crystal usually consists of molecules at the lattice points of the crystal?
- 20. What type of cubic unit cell has a packing efficiency of 74%?
- 21. What type of solid often adopt cubic closest packed crystal structures?
- 22. an ordered array of points describing the arrangement of particles that form a crystal
- 24. What type of cubic unit cell has the coordination number 8?
Down
- 1. in what type of solids the arrangement of particles is not in an orderly fashion
- 5. What hole is formed by a planer triangle of touching spheres capped by a simple sphere lying in the dip between them?
- 6. How many categories of solids are there?
- 7. In what type of solid particles are arranged in an orderly fashion?
- 8. What type of crystal structure consists of alternating positively-charged cations and negatively-charged anions?
- 9. What solids are hard and brittle, with extremely high melting and boiling points, but their conductivity and hardness vary?
- 11. What type of crystal consist of metal cations surrounded by a "sea" of mobile valence electrons?
- 12. What hole lies between two triangles of spheres on adjoining layers?
- 13. at what temperature most elements are solid?
- 15. The only element that crystallizes in a simple cubic unit cell
- 16. Which type of substance particles are close together and organized?
- 18. How many types of cubic unit cells are there?
- 23. What type of network crystal consists of atoms at the lattice points of the crystal, with each atom being covalently bonded to its nearest neighbor atoms?