lecture 1 - stanford universitydionne.stanford.edu/matsci202_2011/lecture1_ppt.pdf · lecture 1...

36
Lecture 1 Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011

Upload: trinhdiep

Post on 15-Mar-2018

218 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Lecture 1Lecture 1

Materials Chemistry, 2011

Page 2: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Syllabus

Description:

y

MatSci 192/202 will introduce students to the fundamental chemical principles underlying materials structure, properties, synthesis, and applications. Beginning from basic atomic and molecular bonding, pp g g gstudents will learn how electronic structure impacts chemical properties and processing. Topics for the course include atomic and quantum chemistry; molecular orbital theory and molecular

lid b di id b h i d h i dsymmetry; solid bonding; acid-base chemistry; redox chemistry; and coordination chemistry and metal complexes. The course will also cover frontiers of materials chemistry, including nanomaterials, photocatalysis and bioinorganic materials chemistry photocatalysis, and bioinorganic materials chemistry.

Prerequisite: Introductory chemistry and physics.

Page 3: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Ashwin Atre (TA) Prof. Jen Dionne

Page 4: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

W b i h //di f d d ClWebsite: http://dionne.stanford.edu ClassesAlso, coursework.stanford.edu

Text: ‘Inorganic Chemistry’ (Fifth Edition), Shriver and AtkinsText: Inorganic Chemistry (Fifth Edition), Shriver and AtkinsI will also draw some nanomaterials content from ‘Materials Chemistry’ by B. Fahlman,

available electronically using Stanford’s available electronically using Stanford s Socrates catalog.

Page 5: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

MatSci 192/202 Policies and Dates:

1. Respect and obey Stanford’s Honor Code (http://www.stanford.edu/dept/vpsa/judicialaffairs/guiding/honorcode.htm)

2 Collaboration policy: Limited homework collaboration You are welcome to 2. Collaboration policy: Limited homework collaboration. You are welcome to discuss problems and concepts with fellow students verbally, but you should not share written work.

3 Exams will be “open note” (1 page single sided sheet) but limited time format 3. Exams will be open note (1 page, single sided sheet) but limited time format. Exam dates are:

* Midterm exam (in class, 75 minute limit): Wednesday, November 2

* Fi l W d d D b 8* Final exam: Wednesday, December 14 at 8:30am

4. Homework will generally be issued on Wednesday and will be due the following Wednesday in class. Late homework will be scored according to the

l tirelation:

HomeworkScore(tdays) = HomeworkScore(Duedate)* 2-t (integer t: 1, 2, 3,…)

Exceptions will only be granted for extenuating circumstances and with prior p y g g papproval.

Page 6: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

J l Cl b E h k f h d ill j l 5. Journal Club: Each week, a team of three students will present a journal article from the recent literature highlighting applications of class topics to relevant scientific and industrial challenges. The article will be posted online the Sunday before each Wednesday presentation. Presentations should not t e Su day be o e eac ed esday p ese tat o ese tat o s s ou d otexceed 15 minutes. Please assemble into teams of 3 using the doodle poll here: http://www.doodle.com/egtnpxidun3u7ndk

If you are not able to sign up for an oral presentation, you will be required to y g p p , y qindividually write a two-page summary , due on the day of the final, on an article of your choosing from one of the following journals: Science, Nature, Nature Materials, Nature Photonics, Nature Nanotech, JACS, PRL, APL.

6. Course grades will be weighted as follows:

Homework: 35%

Midterm Exam: 25%Midterm Exam: 25%

Final Exam: 30%

Journal Club: 10%

Page 7: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

A Brief History of …materials chemistry

Weight: 137 g (0.3 lbs)

Battery Lifetime: 7 hr (talk time)300 hr (standby)

TodayiPh , 2 hr recharge time300 hr (standby)

Cost: $199iPhone 4,

Li-ion battery

, 2 hr recharge time

1983DynaTAC

Record English Half-marathon Lance Armstrong’s

DynaTACmobile phone

Record English Channel swim (6

hours, 57 min)

Half marathon world record (58 minutes)

Lance Armstrong s climb up Tunitas

Creek (20 minutes)

Page 8: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

If the DynaTAC battery had the capacity of the iphone, how much would it weigh?

Weight: 137 g (0.3 lbs)

Battery Lifetime: 7 hr (talk time)300 hr (standby)

TodayiPh , 2 hr recharge time300 hr (standby)

Cost: $199iPhone 4,

Li-ion battery

, 2 hr recharge time

1983DynaTAC

New-born 55’ LED flat

DynaTACmobile phone

Rodin sculpture (500 lbs)

New born Elephant (200

lbs)

55 LED flat-screen TV (50 lbs)

Page 9: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Materials chemistry & batteries

Weight: 137 g (0.3 lbs)

Battery Lifetime: 7 hr (talk time)300 hr (standby) 2 hr recharge time

TodayiPh 300 hr (standby), 2 hr recharge time

Cost: $199iPhone 4,

Li-ion battery

1991 (commercial Li

Weight: 1000 g (2.2 lbs)

Battery Lifetime: 30 min (talk time), 1 hr (standby), 10 hr recharge time

(commercial Li-ion batteries)

1983DynaTAC

Cost: $8800 (2011 dollars)DynaTAC

mobile phone

Page 10: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Materials chemistry & electronic storage

Weight: 0.5g (0.001 lbs)

Cost: $1002010(32 GB)

Size: 11mm x 15mm x 1mm (size of a dime)(32 GB)

1980(20 GB)

Ford F 150 Baby grand 1 TB hard Ford F-150 (~4500 lbs)

Baby grand piano (~600 lbs)

1 TB hard drive (~3 lbs)

Page 11: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Materials chemistry & electronic storage

Weight: 0.5g (0.001 lbs)

Cost: $100 - $1502010(32 GB)

Size: 11mm x 15mm x 1mm (size of a dime)(32 GB)

1980(20 GB)

Ford F-150 McLauren F1 ( $9 0 000)

Paul Allen’s yacht ( $ illi )(~$30,000) (~$970,000) (~$100 million)

Page 12: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Materials chemistry & electronic storage

Weight: 0.5g (0.001 lbs)

Cost: $100 - $1502010(32 GB)

Size: 11mm x 15mm x 1mm (size of a dime)(32 GB)

i h ( lb )

1980(20 GB)

Weight: 2,000,000 g (4400lbs)

Cost: $648,000 - $1,137,600

Size: 70’’ x 44’’ x 32’’ (for each 2.5 GB Size: 70 x 44 x 32 (for each 2.5 GB cabinet)

Page 13: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

1 μm

1947: the first transistor Today: Intel quad core i7 processor

(~8 billion transistors)

Page 14: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Not everything is going nano

20 years ago (500 calories) Today (850 calories)

20 years ago (3 inch diameter, 140 calories)

Today (5-6 inch diameter, 350 calories)(3 inch diameter, 140 calories) (5 6 inch diameter, 350 calories)

Page 15: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Materials chemistry & medical advances

Tissue EngineeringBiomedical implants

Just 15 years ago, Bob Langer and his colleague J h V ti i d k bl Joseph Vacanti pioneered a remarkable new process- growing human tissues in the lab. Back in 1987, Langer and Vacanti couldn't get their work published; journal editors didn't see any practical applications. Today, the pair are acknowledged as the fathers of the field of tissue engineering Now

A device that recognizes tongue movements and translates them into words, serving like an articifiallarynx It fits into the mouth the fathers of the field of tissue engineering. Now,

Langer, Vacanti and his brother Charles, as well as teams of researchers around the world, pursue the day when replacement tissues and organs are readily available, custom-made for those who need them. (Source:

larynx. It fits into the mouth using a palatometer, a device typically used in speech therapy. A small synthesizer would be worn in a shirt pocket to transmit the

http://www.pbs.org/saf/1107/features/body.htm)pwords. (Source: http://gajitz.com/tongue-tech-artificial-larynx-tracks-tongue-transit-to-talk/)

Page 16: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

What is materials chemistry (i.e., what will you learn)?

Probing and controlling 1) the relationships between arrangements of atoms, ions, or molecules in a

material & 2) the material’s overall bulk properties

TheoryPredictions using

analytic techniques (MO

Applicationsenergy, biomaterials,

medicine analytic techniques (MO theory, symmetry)

medicine, nanoscience

Structureunderstanding extended

image from http://www.npl.co.uk

Synthesissolution chemistry or

Propertiescharacterizing ionic and understanding extended

molecular arrangements (solids and complexes)

solution chemistry or bottom-up fabrication of

basic building blocks

characterizing ionic and molecular responses/

reactivity to forces & fields

Page 17: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Egyptians: Cosmetics, Glassmaking, Metallurgy (4000 BCE)

Page 18: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Democritus (420 BCE): Atomic Hypothesis“The only real things are atoms and empty space; all else is mere opinion.”

Page 19: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Alchemists (350BCE - 1800)– Transmutation and the Greek god Hermes

Page 20: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Rene-Just Hauy (1743-1822) – mineralogist who discovered crystal planes

Page 21: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Lavosier (1777) – discovered mass conservation, H, O; denounced phlogiston theory

Page 22: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Sir Humphrey Davy (1778) – inventor of electrochemistry & discoverer of alkali metals

Page 23: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Michael Faraday: Discovers semiconductors – negative temperature coefficient of resistance (1833)

Page 24: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Johann Dobereiner (1817) - noticed relations between atomic weights of similar elements

‘Dobereiner Triads’

Li = 7Na = 7 + 16 = 23

K = 23 + 16 = 39K = 23 + 16 = 39

Ca = 12 + 8 =20Sr = 20 + 24 = 44Ba = 44 + 24 = 68

S = 32Se = 32+47= 79

Te = 79 + 47 = 126

Also lateral relations were observed:

Te = 79 + 47 = 126

observed:

Cl - P = Br - As = I - Sb = 5

Page 25: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Mendeleev & Meyers (1871): ordering according to atomic weights and similar properties.

* The elements, if arranged according to their atomic weight, exhibit an apparent periodicity of properties.

*Elements which are similar in regards to their chemical properties have atomic weights which are either of nearly the same value (e.g., Pt, Ir, Os) or which increase regularly (e g K Rb Cs)or which increase regularly (e.g., K, Rb, Cs).

* We must expect the discovery of many yet unknown elements–for example, two elements, analogous to Al and Si whose atomic weights analogous to Al and Si, whose atomic weights would be between 65 and 75.

Page 26: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Luigi Galvani (1781): Precursor to the battery with “Animal Electricity.”

Page 27: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

CuZnCuCuZn

Alessandro Volta (1800) and John F. Daniel (1836): The first batteries. The Daniel cell produced 1.1 V and powered telegraphs and telephones for

over 100 years.

Page 28: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

William Adams and Richard Day – the first photovoltaic cell (Se, 1876)(below: The first solar powered battery at Bell labs, 1954)

Page 29: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Russell Ohl – The discovery of the PN Junction (Bell Labs, 1927 – 1940)

Page 30: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Bardeen, Brittain, Shockley – Transistor (1948)

Page 31: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Linus Pauling– Explained chemical bonds using quantum mechanics (1939)

Page 32: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Development and commercialization of electron microscopy (1930-1970)

From Zettl group, Science 323 (2009)0.5 nm

1st practical TEM, 1933

Page 33: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

1 nmCredit: Alivisatos group, UC Berkeley

Page 34: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Sidney Farber (1950) – Father of modern chemotherapy who helped develop anti-folates

Cisplatin

Folic Acid Methotrexate

Page 35: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Recent breakthroughs in materials chemistry

http://www.light.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp

CatalysisOrganic / carbon-based CatalysisOrganic / carbon based devices

Flexible solar cells & polymeric devices

Anti-cancer drugs (Gleevec)

Battery technologyMetamaterials (invisibility, ultra-microscopy)

Page 36: Lecture 1 - Stanford Universitydionne.stanford.edu/MatSci202_2011/Lecture1_ppt.pdf · Lecture 1 Materials Chemistry, 2011. Syllabus Description: MatSci 192/202 will introduce students

Upcoming materials chemistry challenges

o Highly efficient, cost effective solar cells

o Solar-fuel systems and improved battery technology

o Environmental materials engineering (e g water purification) o Environmental materials engineering (e.g., water purification)

o Advanced computing (optical computing, spin computing)

o Imaging and visualization (display technology)

“The important

g g p y gy

o Biomedical materialsIt is no good getting furious if you get The important

thing in science is not so much to obtain new

f f y gstuck. What I do is keep thinking about the problem but work

facts as to discover new

ways of

on something else. Sometimes it is years before I see the way f d I th thinking about

them. –William Bragg

forward. In the case of…black holes, it was 29 years. - Hawking