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A New Kind of Chemistry

pq writes "Reasearchers at VCU, Pennsylvania State have created "superatoms" of aluminium and iodine that behave like the alkaline earth metals. From the article: "Our production of such a species is a stirring development that may lead to new compounds with a completely new class of chemistry and applications". Another article on Biomedcentral"

7 of 57 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Ugh... Get your facts by AlgaeEater · · Score: 4, Informative

    Corrosion. def: a state of deterioration in metals caused by oxidation or chemical action.

    Corrosion tends to be used for a continual process of deterioration whereas the oxidation coating formed on aluminium is very stable and prevents any further corrosion. A similar thing happens with the carbon lattice in diamond; it is a hydrogen coating rather than oxygen though.

    AE

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  2. Re:Ugh... Get your facts by myukew · · Score: 3, Informative

    corrosion is an ongoing process as long as the environment doesn't change, like with iron and water.

    aluminium gets this ultra thin oxide layer and doesn't react any further.
    so they're right

  3. Re:How about radicals? by Xilman · · Score: 2, Informative
    I'm no expert in chemistry so perhaps there is something about these clusters that causes the radical moniker to be inappropriate.

    In chemistry, the term radical is almost always reserved for electrically neutral species containing an unpaired electron (very rarely, two unpaired electrons). By this measure, these metal clusters are not radicals.

    Paul

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  4. Re:Chemical Bonding? by Dachannien · · Score: 3, Informative

    Well, there are some non-first-year concepts at work here. From looking at the Science* article (14 Jan 2005 issue, p 231-235), I gather that the aluminum atoms form a small "jellium" cluster. Within a cluster of this type, the electrical potential is relatively uniform, but there are boundary effects at the edge of the cluster.

    In the Al13 cluster, the inner electrons are kept in normal ground states, and combined with the atoms' protons, form a net positive charge. The outer (valence) electrons react to this charge by falling into energy states dependent upon the whole Al13 molecule, not the individual atoms. In fact, the molecule's energy states can resemble those of other atoms, and can behave in the same ways that those other atoms do. Al13, for example, resembles a halogen, and so it binds to varying numbers of iodine atoms covalently.

    Now, I'm not actually a chemist (I was brought up in electrical engineering and computer science), so my reading of the details might be wrong, but I think that's how it works.

    (* You'll either need a Science subscription, or you'll need to access from the domain of an institution that has a site subscription. The vast majority of US universities do.)

  5. Re:'Nanotech' implications? by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...primitive components of a mass production system (basically a highly iterative and controlled series of reactions, building larger and larger blocks, that progress down a conveyer belt).

    Anyway, it sounds good, and I cannot wait until the real application of this becomes app'nt (breaking the current nm barrier in CPU tech so we can hit 10ghz at consumer level).


    I think you're too much into molecular assembly. Nanotech has slowly acquired a new meaning: Use of nanostructures (nanotubes) and quantum physics (quantum dot) for diverse apps.

    IIRC (If I recall correctly), nanotube transistors are what is needed to go not only for GHz, but for THz in computing. There are already experiments in nanotubes superconductivity.

    If you're still into molecular assemblers, you could try these new DNA-as-crane chip manufacturing methods. They sound promising.

  6. Re:The stories seem to contradict each other by Lars+T. · · Score: 3, Informative

    The sentence from the Times Dispatch is refering to the Al13 cluster, the Scientist talks about the Al14 cluster.

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    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  7. Re:Super-atoms? by Wandering+Wombat · · Score: 2, Informative
    The Cominco smelter is one of the oldest smelters in North America (Canada, actually) operating since 1895. I'll be closing down soon, thank god, although the river live in the area is not expected to return. Ever.

    They had lead, arsenic, thallium, and lord knows what else poisoning there, and they didn't even tell anyone thallium was on the premises until 2001. There was a fine, an apology, and that was it. True, this is a bad example, since it is a huge old smelter, and not the most efficient thing in the world.

    They ran some tests, and the amount of some elements in the clothing of Cominco workers was past the safe limit. This was clothing that had already been washed, mind you.

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