Talk:Atom cluster
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The contents of the Atom cluster page were merged into Nanocluster#Atom clusters on 30 December 2022. For the contribution history and old versions of the merged article please see its history. |
I removed some stuff which may be true for some clusters, but is definitely not true for all clusters. The problem is that the article previously pretended that it is, in fact, true for all clusters in chemistry. For instance, small carbon clusters are linear, non polycyclic structures. Also, there are many types of clusters that are not necessarily composed of three-membered rings, such as the fullerenes and II-VI metal chalcogenide clusters. Here is what I removed:
The shape of a cluster is based upon a trangular-faced polyhedron, also known as a deltahedron. Using a set of semi-empirical rules devised by K. Wade and extended by M. Mingos known either as Wade's Rules or Polyhedral skeletal electron pair theory it is possible to determine, often unambiguously, the shape of a cluster from its chemical formula.
Ed Sanville 22:09, 5 November 2005 (UTC)
Indeed clusters are deltahedral
[edit]For those that work in this area, dimetallic compounds or in fact any old linear chain is not a cluster. At least for transition metal end of this, as defined some years ago by Cotton. So the verbage on Re2Cl8 etc is not about clusters. In fact the Re2 species are building blocks to clusters quite analogous to acetylene being a building block to benzene. As mentioned above, clusters contain at minimum triangles. The boron and zintl worlds think the same way. Also they have M---M bonding of some sort, so that basic iron acetate etc would not qualify. So the article currently is pretty misleading. --Smokefoot 13:38, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
- Hi Smokefoot, then you have an issue with reference 1 listed in the text. Are dimetallic compounds really that alien from trimetallics and higher ups? V8rik 16:16, 4 July 2006 (UTC)
- V8rik: Apparently I was wrong and misinformed, dimetallics are clusters to many people. Thank you,--Smokefoot 02:51, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
Mispelled reference
[edit]don't know how to change it but the 1st refernce should read:
Huheey, James E. Title: Inorganic chemistry : principles of structure and reactivity / James E. Huheey. Edition: 3rd ed. Published: New York : Harper & Row, c1983. ISBN: 0060429879
according to cambridge's online library catalogue, hope this helps Spuddddddd 5march08 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 131.111.114.141 (talk) 11:58, 5 March 2008 (UTC)
Punctutation
[edit]All of the hyphens in the valences should be replaced with minus signs. —DIV (128.250.80.15 (talk) 03:25, 10 March 2008 (UTC))
Lead Cluster
[edit]There is a known problem with Faessler's [Pb10]2- refinement. It is now established that the cluster is in fact nine atomic.
Nomenclature: closo, nido, arachno, and so on
[edit]Moved discussion to the Chemistry WikiProject talk page.