Hi,
Four salt (NaCl) questions.
1. Why are the surfaces of salt flat (at least at a macroscopic scale)? If you build a stick and ball or sphere packing mode of NaCll, this suggests the growth of a salt crystal from an evaporating, saturated aqueous solution could occur in any direction. So the resulting crystal could have peaks and troughs on its surface as the ions bonded randomly with the surface of the crystal. However, one sees a smooth surface on the crystals formed. Why is this?
2. Growing large NaCl crystal. I tried a saturated distilled water solution in a clean jam jar and dangled a piece of string in the solution tied to to a pencil and covered the exposed surface with filter paper. The string dangled through a hole in the filter paper. My thinking was the filter paper would help the water to evaporate and the crystals would form on the rough string as the solution passed its saturation point. What's happened is the salt solution has passed up the string and crystallised on the edge of the filter paper rather than forming a crystal on the string. So I have lots of small crystals - that's where I started.
3. How can I explain pyramidal salt flakes (I think they are from "sea salt")? The pyramids are up to 3mm across the base and have ridges a bit like those Mesopotamian or Mexican pyramids. Is the shape a result of the presence of iodide ions? Can a salt crystal form which is a mixture of NaCl and NaI thereby affecting the resulting crystal shape?
4. Where does the energy come from to transform Na(s) and Cl(s) to NaCl(s)? One reads as the overall salt-forming reaction is energetically favourable / exothermic that determines the direction of the reaction. When one talks about formation of salt one says the Na is ionised to Na+ and donates its electron to Cl to form Cl- and the electrostatic attraction between the ions forms the ionic bonds. However, when one explains ionisation of an atom one says the cause of the ionisation is the absorption of an e.m. quantum of appropriate energy by the outer shell electron. I haven't worked out what the photon energy needs to be and hence the frequency of the quantum - whether it would be a light photon or an Xray or a microwave or whatever. Now, when one reacts sodium with chlorine it is described as burning and the energy given off "drives" the reaction. Now, the energy given off by the burning is heat and light. Is the energy from the heat or light as e.m. radiation or is it the increased temperature from the atoms "banging together" that causes the ionisation? If it is the "banging together" that provides the activation / ionisation energy, where are the e.m. photons to make the ions that react?
Thanks
Clive