23.0k views
5 votes
From the ionic radii given in the figure, calculate the potential energy of a single Ca−O ion pair that is just touching.

User Jantimon
by
6.9k points

1 Answer

1 vote

The potential energy of a single Ca−O ion pair that is just touching is approximately
\(1.50 * 10^(-18) \, \text{J}\).

To calculate the potential energy (U) of a single Ca−O ion pair just touching, you can use Coulomb's law, which is given by the formula:


\[ U = \frac{q_1 \cdot q_2}{{r}} \]

Where:

- k is Coulomb's constant (
\(8.99 * 10^9 \, \text{Jm/C}^2\))

-
\( q_1 \) and \( q_2 \) are the charges of the ions (in Coulombs)

- r is the distance between the centers of the ions (in meters)

Given ionic radii:

-
\( r_{\text{Ca}} = 1.76 \) (ionic radius of Ca in Ångströms)

-
\( r_{\text{O}} = 0.66 \) (ionic radius of O in Ångströms)

The distance (r) is the sum of the ionic radii when the ions are just touching:


\[ r = r_{\text{Ca}} + r_{\text{O}} \]

Calculate the potential energy (U):


\[ U = \frac{{k \cdot |q_{\text{Ca}} \cdot q_{\text{O}}|}}{{r}} \]

Now, considering that
\( q_{\text{Ca}} \) and \( q_{\text{O}} \) are the charges of Ca and O ions (which are typically +2 and -2 respectively), calculate U.


\[ U = \frac{{(8.99 * 10^9 \, \text{Jm/C}^2) \cdot |(+2) \cdot (-2)|}}{{r_{\text{Ca}} + r_{\text{O}}}} \]


\[ U \approx \frac{{8.99 * 10^9 * 4}}{{1.76 + 0.66}} \, \text{J} \]


\[ U \approx 1.50 * 10^(-18) \, \text{J} \]

The probable question may be:

From the ionic radii given in the figure (O= 0.66, Ca= 1.76), calculate the potential energy of a single Ca−O ion pair that is just touching.

e=1.60 x 10^-19C

k=8.99 x 10^9 Jm/C^2)

User Deepan
by
7.2k points