G. V. GIBBS
Departmentsof GeologicalSciencesand MaterialScienceand Engineering,VirginiaTech,Blacksburg,Virginia24061,U.S.A.
M. A. SPACKMAN
Department of Chemistry, University of New England, Armidale, New South Wales 2351, Australia
M. B. BOISEN, JR.
Departmentof Mathematics,VirginiaTech,Blacksburg,Virginia24601,U.S.A
ABSTRACT
Within the context of the total electron density distribution, a well-defined set of radii
known as bonded radii can be derived by measuring, along the bond path, the distance
between the center of an atom and the point of minimum electron density. As the properties of a crystal, including its total energy, are determined by its electron density distribution, such radii provide an objective measure of atomic size and a basis for understanding and correlating physical and chemical properties.
Bonded radii observed for chloride and oxide anions are not constant for a given coordination number, as assumed in derivations oflists of ionic and crystal radii, but increase
in a regular way with bond length. On the other hand, bonded radii observed for cations
show a much smaller increase with coordination number than that reported in studies of
ionic and crystal radii. An examination of the electron density distributions observed for
the alkali halides, fluorides, oxides, and silicates indicates that the distributions in such
crystals can be regarded as largely atomic in nature, despite bond type. Promolecule radii
calculated for spherically averaged electron density distributions for corresponding coordinated polyhedra with bond lengths and angles fixed at values observed in crystals reproduce to within -0.05 A the Tosi-Fumi radii derived for the alkali halides with the rock
salt structure and bonded radii observed for the silica polymorphs, BeO, MgO, CuCl,
CaF2, and CuBr. The close correspondence of pro molecule and bonded radii indicates that
the electron density distribution of individual atoms in these crystals decreases rapidly
with distance. Reliable estimates of bonded radii of atoms in crystals are obtained from a
calculated charge density distribution for the corresponding coordinated polyhedra making
up such crystals, using Roothaan-Hartree-Fock wave functions.
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/99f6/e0ec9bbcdc92e28a15e33703f60bff29be58.pdf

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