Baby boomer game. Copper’s Virus-Killing Powers Were Known Even to the Ancients The SARS-CoV-2 virus endures for days on plastic or metal but disintegrates soon after landing on copper surfaces. Here we report a catalyst that features two adjacent copper atoms, which we call an 'atom-pair catalyst', that work together to carry out the critical bimolecular step in CO 2 reduction. The atom-pair catalyst features stable Cu 1 0 -Cu 1 x+ pair structures, with Cu 1 x+ adsorbing H 2 O and the neighbouring Cu 1 0 adsorbing CO 2, which thereby.
Source: 'Properties of Copper and Copper Alloys at Cryogenic Temperatures' by N.J. Simon, E.S. Drexler, and R.P. Reed ( NIST MN 177)
General and Atomic Properties of Copper
Atomic Number | 29 |
Atomic Weight | 63.546 |
Atomic Diameter | 2.551 x 10 -10m |
Melting Point | 1356 K |
Boiling Point | 2868 K |
Density at 293 K | 8.94 x 10 3 kg/m 3 |
Electronic Structure | 3d 104s |
Valence States | 2,1 |
Fermi Energy | 7.0 eV |
Fermi Surface | spherical, necks at [111] |
Hall Coefficient | -5.12 x 10 -11 m 3/(A .S) |
Magnetic State | diamagnetic |
Heat of Fusion | 134 J/g |
Heat of Vaporization | 3630 J/g |
Heat of Sublimation @ 1299 K | 3730 J/g |
Copper Atom Size
Crystallographic Features of Copper
Copper Atomic Structure
Type of Structure | A1 |
Space Group | O h5 - Fm3m |
Crystal Structure | face-centered cubic |
Number of Atoms per Unit Cell | 4 |
Lattice Parameters at 293 K | 3.6147 x 10 -10 m |
Distance of Closest Atomic Approach (Burgers vector) at 293 | 2.556 x 10 -10m |
Goldschmidt Atomic Radii (12-fold coordination) | 1.28 x 10 -10m |
Atomic Volume | 1.182 10 -29m 3 |