Luckily, going from amu/Å^3 to g/mL is simply an exercise in unit conversions.
We can use equation 21.2 along with the fact that
1 mL 1 cm^3 1024 Å^3 (21.3)
to determine a macroscopic density in measurable units from a microscopic
density in terms of unit cell parameters.
The masses of the atoms and molecules are taken from the cumulative num-
ber of atoms or molecules in the unit cell. The volume of the unit cell is de-
termined from geometry. From geometry, the equation that gives the volume
of a six-sided object with parallel opposing faces (called a parallelepiped) is
21.4 Densities 739
volume abc(1 cos^2 cos^2 cos^2
2 cos cos cos ) (21.4)
Equation 21.4 is general; the user should recognize that for some crystal lat-
tices, two or three sides of the unit cell may have the same length, and two or
three of the angles may also be the same (that is, 90°). The definitions of the
angles , , and with respect to the lattice sides should also be remembered.
For a unit cell that has 90° angles, equation 21.4 reduces to
volume abc
as it should for a right-angle solid. Examples 21.3 and 21.4 show how to relate
macroscopic densities and microscopic information.
Example 21.3
Solid silver exists as a face-centered cubic crystal with a4.09 Å. What is the
density of silver? Assume that each silver atom has a mass of 108 amu.
Solution
First, we must determine the number of silver atoms in a face-centered cubic
unit cell. Each corner atom contributes ^18 of an atom to each unit cell. There
are eight corner atoms, contributing a total of^18 1 1 silver atom. Each
face contributes ^12 of an atom to each unit cell. Overall, the six faces of the cu-
bic lattice add ^12 6 3 silver atoms to each unit cell. Each cell therefore has
3 1 4 silver atoms per cell. If each silver atom has a mass of 108 amu,
then the total mass of each unit cell would be four silver atoms:
mass 4 108 amu 432 amu
The volume of the unit cell can be determined using equation 21.4, in part
by recognizing that in a cubic cell the angles are all 90°:
volume abc4.09 Å 4.09 Å 4.09 Å
volume 68.4 Å^3
Using the definition of density and converting to its more common units:
density
vo
m
lu
a
m
ss
e
4
6
3
8
2
.4
am
Å^3
u
1.6605
1
am
10
u
(^27) kg
1
1
02
c
4
m
Å
3
3
10
1
0
k
0
g
g
density 10.5 g/cm^3
The measured density of silver is 10.5 g/cm^3 , exactly the same (to three sig-
nificant figures) as the calculated density.