Definition and Overview

Conceptual Definition

Covalent network solids: solids composed of atoms linked by a continuous network of covalent bonds extending throughout the material. No discrete molecules present; instead, a giant molecular lattice exists.

Classification

Classified as one of four primary solid types: ionic, metallic, molecular, covalent network. Distinguished by strong directional covalent bonds forming a rigid 3D network.

Significance

Exhibit exceptional stability, high melting points, and distinct electrical and mechanical properties. Important in materials science and solid state chemistry.

"The strength of covalent networks defines the hardness and stability of many technologically vital materials." -- Linus Pauling

Nature of Covalent Bonding

Bond Type

Directional covalent bonds formed by shared electron pairs between atoms. High bond enthalpy ensures lattice stability.

Bonding Characteristics

Localized electron sharing leads to fixed bond angles and lengths. Network extends infinitely in one, two, or three dimensions.

Hybridization

Common hybridizations: sp3 in diamond, sp2 in graphite. Determines geometry and physical properties.

Crystal Structures and Lattice Types

Diamond Lattice

Each carbon atom tetrahedrally bonded to four others (sp3). Face-centered cubic lattice with two-atom basis.

Graphite Structure

Planar hexagonal layers with sp2 bonding. Weak van der Waals forces between layers enable cleavage.

Silicon and Germanium

Diamond cubic structures similar to carbon diamond. Semiconducting properties arise from lattice symmetry and bonding.

Other Network Solids

Boron nitride (hexagonal and cubic forms), quartz (SiO2) with tetrahedral silicate networks.

Examples of Covalent Network Solids

Diamond

Allotrope of carbon. Hardest known natural material. Wide band gap semiconductor.

Graphite

Layered carbon allotrope. Good electrical conductor parallel to layers. Lubricant due to weak interlayer forces.

Silicon

Semiconductor with diamond cubic lattice. Basis of modern electronics and photovoltaics.

Quartz (SiO2)

Three-dimensional network of SiO4 tetrahedra. Piezoelectric and optically active.

Boron Nitride

Hexagonal form is lubricant, cubic form is superhard material analogous to diamond.

Physical Properties

Melting and Boiling Points

Extremely high melting points due to strong covalent bonds; e.g., diamond > 3500 °C.

Hardness

Diamond: highest hardness (Mohs scale 10). Other network solids also exhibit high mechanical strength.

Solubility

Insoluble in common solvents; network prevents dissociation into molecules.

Electrical Conductivity

Insulators

Diamond and quartz: wide band gap insulators, no free electrons.

Semiconductors

Silicon and germanium: moderate band gap; conductivity increases with doping and temperature.

Conductors

Graphite: delocalized pi electrons in layers provide electrical conductivity parallel to planes.

Thermal Properties

Thermal Conductivity

Diamond: highest thermal conductivity among solids. Graphite also exhibits anisotropic thermal conduction.

Thermal Expansion

Low coefficients of thermal expansion due to strong bonding and rigid lattice.

Heat Capacity

Typical of crystalline solids; vibrational modes dominate at room temperature.

Mechanical Properties

Hardness and Strength

Bond network imparts exceptional hardness and high Young's modulus.

Brittleness

Strong directional bonds cause brittleness; fracture occurs without plastic deformation.

Anisotropy

Graphite shows anisotropic mechanical behavior; strong in-plane, weak interlayer bonding.

Synthesis and Preparation

Natural Formation

Formed under high pressure/temperature: diamond in mantle, quartz in crust.

Artificial Synthesis

High-pressure high-temperature (HPHT) and chemical vapor deposition (CVD) for diamond.

Crystal Growth Techniques

Zone refining, Czochralski pulling for silicon single crystals.

Applications and Uses

Electronics

Silicon: backbone of semiconductor devices, integrated circuits, solar cells.

Cutting and Abrasives

Diamond and cubic boron nitride: industrial cutting tools, abrasives.

Lubricants

Graphite used as solid lubricant due to layered structure.

Optics and Sensors

Quartz: optical devices, piezoelectric sensors.

Comparison with Other Solid Types

Versus Ionic Solids

Ionic solids: electrostatic attraction, lower directional bonding, soluble in water; network solids insoluble.

Versus Metallic Solids

Metallic: delocalized electrons, malleable, conductive in all directions; network solids brittle, directional bonding.

Versus Molecular Solids

Molecular: weak intermolecular forces, low melting points; network solids have strong covalent bonds, high melting points.

Limitations and Challenges

Processing Difficulty

Hardness and brittleness complicate machining and shaping.

Defect Control

Impurities and lattice defects affect electronic and mechanical properties.

Cost

High synthesis costs limit widespread use of synthetic diamonds and cubic boron nitride.

References

  • Pauling, L., The Nature of the Chemical Bond, Cornell University Press, 1960, pp. 150-200.
  • Kittel, C., Introduction to Solid State Physics, 8th ed., Wiley, 2005, pp. 45-75.
  • West, A.R., Solid State Chemistry and Its Applications, 2nd ed., Wiley, 2014, pp. 210-250.
  • Dresselhaus, M.S., Dresselhaus, G., & Jorio, A., Group Theory: Application to the Physics of Condensed Matter, Springer, 2008, pp. 100-130.
  • Zallen, R., The Physics of Amorphous Solids, Wiley, 1998, pp. 90-120.
PropertyDiamondGraphiteSilicon
Bond Typesp3 covalentsp2 covalent + van der Waalssp3 covalent
Melting Point (°C)~3550~3600 (sublimes)~1414
Electrical ConductivityInsulatorGood conductor (in-plane)Semiconductor
Hardness (Mohs)101-26.5
Diamond cubic lattice:- Each atom: tetrahedral coordination (4 bonds)- Unit cell: face-centered cubic with basis of 2 atoms- Bond length: ~1.54 Å- Bond angle: 109.5°Diamond synthesis (CVD process):1. Gas mixture: CH4 + H22. Microwave plasma activates gas molecules3. Carbon radicals deposit on substrate forming diamond lattice4. Growth rate: 1-10 μm/hour
Graphite structure:- Hexagonal layers of sp2-bonded carbon atoms- Interlayer spacing: ~3.35 Å- Weak van der Waals forces between layers- Electrical conductivity primarily within layersComparison summary:| Property | Covalent Network Solid | Ionic Solid | Metallic Solid | Molecular Solid ||--------------------|-----------------------|--------------------|-------------------|-------------------|| Bonding | Strong covalent | Ionic electrostatic | Metallic bonding | Van der Waals || Melting Point (°C) | High (>1000) | Moderate to high | Moderate | Low (<300) || Electrical Conductivity | Varies (insulator to conductor) | Conductive in molten state | Good conductor | Poor conductor || Hardness | High | Moderate | Variable | Low |