Body-Centered Cubic Problems
Body-Centered Cubic Problems
Problem #1: The edge length of the unit cell of Ta, is 330.6 pm; the unit cell is body-centered cubic.
Tantalum has a density of 16.69 g/cm3.
Solution:
1) Convert pm to cm:
3) Calculate mass of the 2 tantalum atoms in the body-centered cubic unit cell:
Problem #2a: Chromium crystallizes in a body-centered cubic structure. The unit cell volume is 2.583 x
10¯23 cm3. Determine the atomic radius of Cr in pm.
Solution:
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We wish to determine the value of 4r, from which we will obtain r, the radius of the Cr atom.
Using the Pythagorean Theorem, we find:
d2 + (d2)2 = (4r)2
3d2 = (4r)2
r = 1.28 x 10¯8 cm
Problem #2b: Chromium crystallizes with a body-centered cubic unit cell. The radius of a chromium atom is
128 pm . Calculate the density of solid crystalline chromium in grams per cubic centimeter.
Solution:
1) Convert pm to cm:
2) Use the Pythagorean theorem to calculate the unit cell edge length:
d2 + (d2)2 = (4r)2
3d2 = (4r)2
3d2 = 16r2
d = 2.8868 x 10¯8 cm
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1.726868 x 10¯22 g / 2.4056 x 10¯23 cm3 = 7.18 g/cm3 (to three sig figs)
Problem #3: Barium has a radius of 224 pm and crystallizes in a body-centered cubic structure. What is the
edge length of the unit cell? (This is the reverse of problem #4.)
Solution:
4r = 896 pm
d2 + (d2)2 = (896)2
3d2 = 802816
d2 = 267605.3333. . .
d = 517 pm
Problem #4: Metallic potassium has a body-centered cubic structure. If the edge length of unit cell is 533
pm, calculate the radius of potassium atom. (This is the reverse of problem #3.)
Solution:
d2 + (d2)2 = (4r)2
d2 + 2d2 = 16r2
3d2 = 16r2
r2 = 3d2 / 16
r = (d3) / 4
r = (5333) / 4
r = 231 pm
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Problem #5: Sodium has a density of 0.971 g/cm3 and crystallizes with a body-centered cubic unit cell. (a)
What is the radius of a sodium atom? (b) What is the edge length of the cell? Give answers in picometers.
Solution:
22.99 g/mol divided by 6.022 x 1023 mol-1 = 3.81767 x 10-23 g (this is the average mass of one
atom of Na)
d2 + (d2)2 = (4r)2
3d2 = 16r2
r2 = 3(4.2842 x 10-8)2 / 16
r = 1.855 x 10-8 cm
5) The radius of the sodium atom is 185.5 pm. The edge length is 428.4 pm. The manner of these
conversions are left to the reader.
Problem #6: At a certain temperature and pressure an element has a simple body-centred cubic unit cell. The
corresponding density is 4.253 g/cm3 and the atomic radius is 1.780 Å. Calculate the atomic mass (in amu)
for this element.
Solution:
2) Use the Pythagorean Theorem to calculate d, the edge length of the unit cell:
d2 + (d2)2 = (4r)2
3d2 = 16r2
d = 4.11 x 10-8 cm
Problem #7: Mo crystallizes in a body-centered cubic arrangement. Calculate the radius of one atom, given
the density of Mo is 10.28 g /cm3.
Solution:
95.96 g/mol divided by 6.022 x 1023 mol-1 = 1.59349 x 10-22 g (this is the average mass of one
atom of Mo)
d2 + (d2)2 = (4r)2
3d2 = 16r2
r2 = 3(3.14144 x 10-8)2 / 16
Problem #8: Sodium crystallizes in body-centered cubic system, and the edge of the unit cell is 430. pm.
Calculate the dimensions of a cube that would contain one mole of Na.
Solution:
430. pm = 4.30 x 10-8 cm <--- I'm going to give the answer in cm3 rather than pm3
(4.30 x 10-8 cm)3 = 7.95 x 10-23 cm3 <--- vol. of unit cell in cm3
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23.9 cm3 would be a cube 2.88 cm on a side (2.88 being the cube root of 23.9)
Problem #9: Vanadium crystallizes with a body-centered unit cell. The radius of a vanadium atom is 131
pm. Calculate the density of vanadium in g/cm3.
Solution:
1) We are going to use the Pythagorean Theorem to determine the edge length of the unit cell. That edge
length will give us the volume.
The right triangle for Pythagorean Theorem is here. The image is in problem #2.
2) We will use the average mass of one V atom and the two atoms in bcc to determine the mass of V inside
the unit cell.
50.9415 g/mol divided by 6.022 x 1023 mol-1 = 8.459 x 10-23 g <--- average mass of one atom
Problem #10: Titanium metal has a body-centered cubic unit cell. The density of titanium is 4.50 g/cm3.
Calculate the edge length of the unit cell and a value for the atomic radius of titanium. (Hint: In a body-
centered arrangement of spheres, the spheres touch across the body diagonal.)
Solution:
1) We need to determine the volume of one unit cell. I'll approach this in a dimensional analysis sorta way:
See how all the units cancel except for volume and cell. Once we have the volume of the cell,
we can determine the edge lenth by taking the cube root of the volume.
2) (volume/g)
1.00 cm3/4.50 g
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(1.00 cm3/4.50 g) (47.867 g/mol) (1.00 mol/6.022 x 1023 atoms) (2 atoms/cell) <--- because of
body-centered cubic
6) Do the calculation for the volume of the unit cell. The answer is:
7) The edge length is simply the cube root of the cell volume. The answer is:
Comment: often the edge length is asked for in pm. The student is left to determine the
conversion from cm to pm. The answer is 328 pm.
8) For the atomic radius, I will add some guard digits to the edge length (symbolized by 'd' in the
Pythagorean theorem calculation I will use. By the way, remember that hint from the problem text? That's the
thing that allows me to write 4r.
d2 + (d2)2 = (4r)2
(4r)2 = 3d2
16r2 = 3d2
r2 = 3d2 / 16
r = d3 / 4
Bonus Problem: In modeling solid-state structures, atoms and ions are most often modeled as spheres. A
structure built using spheres will have some empty space in it. A measure of the empty (also called void)
space in a particular structure is the packing efficiency, defined as the volume occupied by the spheres
divided by the total volume of the structure.
Given that a solid crystallizes in a body-centered cubic structure that is 3.05 Å on each side, please answer
the following questions.
Solution:
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c. Assuming that the atoms are spheres and the radius of each sphere is 1.32 Å, what is the volume of one
atom in Å3?
I used the key for π on my calculator, so there were some internal digits in addition to that last 4
(which is actually rounded up from the internal digits).
e. Based on your results from parts b and d, what is the packing efficiency of the solid expressed as a
percentage?
67.9%
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