Koolarticles.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
Koolarticles.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Home::Dina Giolitto

A cluster of atoms

Author : Khalil A. Cassimally
Imagine a new variety of compounds; compounds that have properties never seen before or simply compounds that have properties more pronounced than those which we already know of at present. It would be really cool. No, in fact it is really cool! Indeed, an entirely new class of compound is on the verge of getting everybody’s attention.

Only some times back, it has been shown that a new division of compounds could exist. A new study now confirms the idea that a cluster of atom of an element, behaves differently from a single atom of the element. It is as if, a new element is being created.

For example, a cluster of 13 aluminium atoms behaves like a halogen (chlorine, bromine, iodine, etc). In addition, the aluminium cluster can react with halogens to form halogen compounds with novel properties!

However a cluster of one more aluminium atom, that is to say, 14 aluminium atoms, will act not like a halogen but rather like an alkaline earth (calcium, barium, etc) atom. And the ions that are hence formed are in fact totally new types of salts! For instance, when the 14 aluminium atom cluster reacts with 3 iodine atoms, an ion with an absolute charge of –3 is formed. Surprisingly this resulting ion is very stable.

The atom cluster thing has also been a source of debate in the scientific community. According to Shiv Khanna, co-leader of the study, the periodic table must be altered to accommodate the clusters or ‘superatoms,’ as he calls them.

How? Simple. Just add a 3rd dimension to the periodic table. The 13 aluminium atom cluster will then be in the same row and column as iodine since it acts more or less like the latter. Only difference is that it will be in a new plane. Same thing for the 14 aluminium atom cluster in the alkaline earth group and for the other ‘superatoms.’

As if the periodic table wasn’t complicated enough! But I guess that it will be even more so if the additions are made. So don’t you dare think that your generation’s college chemistry was hard!

About the Author

Khalil A. Cassimally is currently Senior Columnist at BackWash.com and Columnist for bbc.co.uk h2g2 The Post where he writes 'Not Scientific Science' column.

Related articles


  1. Nextel Accessories - Nexstuff.com
  2. Robotics Wars
  3. Transfer Technologies and Advances in Future Combat
  4. Augmented Reality and 3D 360-Vision
  5. A Case for Human Machine Visual Interface
  6. Why Can’t Our Brain Process What We See Faster?
  7. Does the Earth Have Hollow Areas Inside it?
  8. There is a Core at the Center of the Earth; Right?
  9. Investment Portfolio of Chromabarography - strategy, market, objective, risk, potential, opportuniti
  10. Association Executives (ASAE) annual convention August 15-18, 2004. gomembers will be the exclusive
  11. NextWest, Inc. to Exhibit NextWest PCXi and NextContact IP-based Communications Solutions at Upcomin
  12. Thought Control
  13. Science Can Be Fun
  14. Many Uses of Metal Detectors
  15. The Glass We Know
  16. UFO Spotted Over Overland Park in 2004
  17. Coordination and Biotech Research
  18. What a Stale Argument!
  19. Biotechnology: Zimbabwe Must Learn From China
  20. Zimbabwe and Biotechnology
  21. Biotechnology Rather Than Aid Can Alleviate Poverty
  22. Kenya Inches Close to Food Sustainability
  23. How To Make Lighter and Thinner Magnesium Components?
  24. Major landmarks on the moon
  25. DNA Genealogy
More related feeds
University of Pennsylvania : Research at Penn : Business :: It's ...
Ultrasonic initially would treat liver cancer because those tumors are close to the skin and rich in blood supply, making them ideal targets for its technology. "There's no competing therapy that's very effective, so it's a significant ...

Technology and its Effect on Society - Future For All
In my 2050 future, medical science has cured most diseases, biotechnology has eliminated hunger and Grandma is a controversial (but popular), Olympic speed skater sporting bionic hips. Will all of those things happen? ...

Biotech Reigns At Wharton’s Business Plan Contest « SMU’s ...
Instead, student entrepreneurs who compete in the Wharton BPC have recently turned their attention to another promising arena: health care–specifically biotechnology, that combination of medicine, basic science and engineering that has ...

Phys. Rev. B 76, 092203 (2007): Das et al. - Plasticity in bulk ...
3 J. Schiøtz and K. W. Jacobsen, Science 301, 1357 2003 . 4 Y. M. Wang, M. W. Chen, F. H. Zhou, and E. Ma, Nature London 419, 912 2002 . 5 L. Lu, L. B. Wang, B. Z. Ding, and K. Lu, J. Mater. Res. 15, 270 2000 . ...

Density Functional Theory of Chlorine-Bridged Platinum Complexes ...
Nanotechnology Research Institute (NRI), National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST),. 1-1-1 Umezono, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8568. (Received April 3, 2007; accepted April 24, 2007; published June 11, 2007) ...

 


 

© 2007 koolarticles.com - All Rights Reserved

eXTReMe Tracker

control anxiety attacks | financial planner | Build Muscle | Anxiety Attacks | Best diet to lose fat |