Lattice Enthalpies and Born Haber Cycles
Lattice Enthalpies and Born Haber Cycles
Lattice Enthalpies and Born Haber Cycles
Lattice enthalpy is a measure of the strength of the forces between the ions in an ionic solid. The greater the lattice enthalpy,
the stronger the forces. This page introduces lattice enthalpies (lattice energies) and Born-Haber cycles.
For sodium chloride, the solid is more stable than the gaseous ions by 787 kJ mol-1, and that is a measure of the strength of the
attractions between the ions in the solid. Remember that energy (in this case heat energy) is released when bonds are made,
and is required to break bonds.
So lattice enthalpy could be described in either of two ways.
It could be described as the enthalpy change when 1 mole of sodium chloride (or whatever) was formed from its scattered
gaseous ions. In other words, you are looking at a downward arrow on the diagram.
Or, it could be described as the enthalpy change when 1 mole of sodium chloride (or whatever) is broken up to form its
scattered gaseous ions. In other words, you are looking at an upward arrow on the diagram.
Both refer to the same enthalpy diagram, but one looks at it from the point of view of making the lattice, and the other from
the point of view of breaking it up. Unfortunately, both of these are often described as "lattice enthalpy".
Definitions
The lattice dissociation enthalpy is the enthalpy change needed to convert 1 mole of solid crystal into its scattered
gaseous ions. Lattice dissociation enthalpies are always positive.
The lattice formation enthalpy is the enthalpy change when 1 mole of solid crystal is formed from its separated
gaseous ions. Lattice formation enthalpies are always negative.
This is an absurdly confusing situation which is easily resolved by never using the term "lattice enthalpy" without qualifying
it.
You should talk about "lattice dissociation enthalpy" if you want to talk about the amount of energy needed to split up a
lattice into its scattered gaseous ions. For NaCl, the lattice dissociation enthalpy is +787 kJ mol-1.
You should talk about "lattice formation enthalpy" if you want to talk about the amount of energy released when a lattice is
formed from its scattered gaseous ions. For NaCl, the lattice formation enthalpy is -787 kJ mol-1.
That immediately removes any possibility of confusion.
You can see that the lattice enthalpy of magnesium oxide is much greater than that of sodium chloride. That's because in
magnesium oxide, 2+ ions are attracting 2- ions; in sodium chloride, the attraction is only between 1+ and 1- ions.
Attractions are governed by the distances between the centers of the oppositely charged ions, and that distance is obviously
greater as the negative ion gets bigger. And you can see exactly the same effect if as you go down Group 1. The next bar chart
shows the lattice enthalpies of the Group 1 chlorides.
Born-Haber Cycles
Standard Atomization Enthalpies
Before we start talking about Born-Haber cycles, we need to define the atomization enthalpy, ΔH . The standard o
a
atomization enthalpy is the enthalpy change when 1 mole of gaseous atoms is formed from the element in its standard state.
Enthalpy change of atomization is always positive. You are always going to have to supply energy to break an element into its
separate gaseous atoms. All of the following equations represent changes involving atomization enthalpy:
1 −1
o
C l2 (g) → C l(g) ΔHa = +122 kJ mol (1)
2
1 −1
o
Br2 (l) → Br(g) ΔHa = +122 kJ mol (2)
2
o −1
N a(s) → N a(g) ΔHa = +107 kJ mol (3)
Notice particularly that the "mol-1" is per mole of atoms formed - NOT per mole of element that you start with. You will quite
commonly have to write fractions into the left-hand side of the equation. Getting this wrong is a common mistake.
The only difference in the diagram is the direction the lattice enthalpy arrow is pointing. It does, of course, mean that you
have to find two new routes. You cannot use the original one, because that would go against the flow of the lattice
enthalpy arrow. This time both routes would start from the elements in their standard states, and finish at the gaseous ions.
-411 + LE = +107 + 496 + 122 - 349
LE = +107 + 496 + 122 - 349 + 411
LE = +787 kJ mol-1
The question arises as to why, from an energetics point of view, magnesium chloride is MgCl2 rather than
MgCl or MgCl3 (or any other formula you might like to choose). It turns out that MgCl2 is the formula of the
compound which has the most negative enthalpy change of formation - in other words, it is the most stable
one relative to the elements magnesium and chlorine.
Let's look at this in terms of Born-Haber cycles of and contrast the enthalpy change of formation for the
imaginary compounds MgCl and MgCl3. That means that we will have to use theoretical values of their lattice
enthalpies. We ca not use experimental ones, because these compounds obviously do not exist! I'm taking
theoretical values for lattice enthalpies for these compounds that I found on the web. I can't confirm these, but
all the other values used by that source were accurate. The exact values do not matter too much anyway,
because the results are so dramatically clear-cut.
1. The Born-Haber cycle for MgCl
We will start with the compound MgCl, because that cycle is just like the NaCl one we have already looked at.
1
Mg(s) + Cl (g) → MgCl(s) (4)
2 2
1st IE of Mg +738
atomization enthalpy of Cl +122
electron affinity of Cl -349
lattice enthalpy -753
calculated ΔHf -94
kJ
1st IE of Mg +738
2nd IE of Mg +1451
atomization enthalpy of Cl (x 2) +244
electron affinity of Cl (x 2) -698
lattice enthalpy -2526
calculated ΔHf -643
You can see that much more energy is released when you make MgCl2 than when you make MgCl. Why is
that? You need to put in more energy to ionize the magnesium to give a 2+ ion, but a lot more energy is
released as lattice enthalpy. That is because there are stronger ionic attractions between 1- ions and 2+ ions
than between the 1- and 1+ ions in MgCl. So what about MgCl3? The lattice energy here would be even
greater.
3. The Born-Haber cycle for MgCl3
The equation for the enthalpy change of formation this time is
3
Mg(s) + Cl (g) → MgCl (s) (6)
2 2 3
So how does that change the numbers in the Born-Haber cycle this time?
You need to add in the third ionization energy of magnesium, because you are making a 3+ ion.
You need to multiply the atomization enthalpy of chlorine by 3, because you need 3 moles of gaseous
chlorine atoms.
You need to multiply the electron affinity of chlorine by 3, because you are making 3 moles of chloride ions.
You again need a different value for lattice enthalpy.
kJ
1st IE of Mg +738
2nd IE of Mg +1451
3rd IE of Mg +7733
atomization enthalpy of Cl (x 3) +366
electron affinity of Cl (x 3) -1047
lattice enthalpy -5440
calculated ΔHf +3949
This time, the compound is hugely energetically unstable, both with respect to its elements, and also to other
compounds that could be formed. You would need to supply nearly 4000 kJ to get 1 mole of MgCl3 to form!
Look carefully at the reason for this. The lattice enthalpy is the highest for all these possible compounds, but it
is not high enough to make up for the very large third ionization energy of magnesium.
Why is the third ionization energy so big? The first two electrons to be removed from magnesium come from
the 3s level. The third one comes from the 2p. That is closer to the nucleus, and lacks a layer of screening as
well - and so much more energy is needed to remove it. The 3s electrons are screened from the nucleus by
the 1 level and 2 level electrons. The 2p electrons are only screened by the 1 level (plus a bit of help from the
2s electrons).
Conclusion