Dictionary Definition
molecular adj
1 relating to or produced by or consisting of
molecules; "molecular structure"; "molecular oxygen"; "molecular
weight is the sum of all the atoms in a molecul"
2 relating to simple or elementary organization;
"proceed by more and more detailed analysis to the molecular facts
of perception"--G.A. Miller [syn: molecular(a)]
[ant: molar(a)]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
Translations
relating to molecules
- German: molekular
- Italian: molecolare
- Spanish: molecular
- Turkish: zerre
Derived terms
- bimolecular
- gram-molecular weight
- intermolecular
- intramolecular
- molecular biologist
- molecular biology
- molecular formula
- molecular genetics
- molecular knife
- molecular medicine
- molecular modeling
- molecular orbital
- molecular sieve
- molecular weight
- monomolecular
- orthomolecular
- supramolecular
- trimolecular
Spanish
Adjective
Extensive Definition
In chemistry, a molecule is
defined as a sufficiently stable electrically
neutral group of at least two atoms in a definite arrangement
held together by very strong chemical
bonds . It can also be defined as a unit of two or more atoms
held together by covalent bonds. In organic
chemistry and biochemistry, the term
molecule is used less strictly and also is applied to charged
organic
molecules and biomolecules. Molecules are
distinguished from polyatomic
ions in this strict sense.
This definition has evolved as knowledge of the
structure of molecules has increased. Earlier definitions were less
precise defining molecules as the smallest
particles of pure chemical
substances that still retain their composition
and chemical properties. This definition often breaks down since
many substances in ordinary experience, such as rocks,
salts,
and metals, are composed
of atoms or ions, but are
not made of molecules.
In the kinetic
theory of gases the term
molecule is often used for any gaseous particle regardless of their
composition. According to this definition noble gases
would also be considered molecules despite the fact that they are
composed of a single non-bonded atom.
History
The term "molecule", from the French molécule
meaning "extremely minute particle," was coined by French
philosopher Rene
Descartes in the 1620s. Although the existence of molecules was
accepted by many chemists since the early 19th century as a result
of Dalton's laws
of Definite and Multiple Proportions (1803-1808) and Avogadro's
law (1811), there was some resistance among positivists
and physicists such as Mach, Boltzmann,
Maxwell,
and Gibbs, who
saw molecules merely as convenient mathematical constructs. The
work of Perrin on
Brownian motion (1911) is considered to be the final proof of the
existence of molecules.
In a molecule, at least two atoms are joined by
shared pairs of electrons in a covalent
bond. It may consist of atoms of the same chemical
element, as with oxygen (O2), or of different
elements, as with water
(H2O). Atoms and complexes connected by non-covalent bonds such as
hydrogen
bonds or ionic bonds
are generally not considered single molecules.
No typical molecule can be defined for ionic
(salts)
and covalent crystals (network
solids) which are composed of repeating unit cells that
extend either in a plane
(such as in graphite)
or three-dimensionally (such as in diamond or sodium
chloride).
The science of molecules is called molecular
chemistry or molecular
physics, depending on the focus. Molecular chemistry deals with
the laws governing the interaction between molecules that results
in the formation and breakage of chemical
bonds, while molecular physics deals with the laws governing
their structure and properties. In practice, however, this
distinction is vague. In molecular sciences, a molecule consists of
a stable system (bound state)
comprising two or more atoms. Polyatomic
ions may sometimes be usefully thought of as electrically
charged molecules. The term unstable molecule is used for very
reactive species,
i.e., short-lived assemblies (resonances) of electrons and
nuclei,
such as radicals,
molecular ions, Rydberg
molecules, transition
states, van
der Waals complexes, or systems of colliding atoms as in
Bose-Einstein
condensates.
Molecular size
Most molecules are far too small to be seen with the opened eye, but there are exceptions. DNA, a macromolecule, can reach macroscopic sizes, as can molecules of many polymers. The smallest molecule is the diatomic hydrogen (H2), with an overall length of roughly twice the 74 picometres (0.74 Å) bond length. Molecules commonly used as building blocks for organic synthesis have a dimension of a few Å to several dozen Å. Single molecules cannot usually be observed by light (as noted above), but small molecules and even the outlines of individual atoms may be traced in some circumstances by use of an atomic force microscope. Some of the largest molecules are macromolecules or supermolecules.Radius
Effective molecular radius is the size a molecule displays in solution. . The table of permselectivity for different substances contains examples.Molecular formula
The empirical formula of a molecule is the simplest integer ratio of the chemical elements that constitute the compound. For example, in their pure forms, water is always composed of a 2:1 ratio of hydrogen to oxygen, and ethyl alcohol or ethanol is always composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen in a 2:6:1 ratio. However, this does not determine the kind of molecule uniquely - dimethyl ether has the same ratio as ethanol, for instance. Molecules with the same atoms in different arrangements are called isomers. The empirical formula is often the same as the molecular formula but not always. For example the molecule acetylene has molecular formula C2H2, but the simplest integer ratio of elements is CH. The molecular formula reflects the exact number of atoms that compose a molecule.The molecular
mass can be calculated from the chemical formula and is
expressed in conventional atomic
mass units equal to 1/12th of the mass of a neutral carbon-12
(12C isotope) atom. For network
solids, the term formula unit
is used in stoichiometric
calculations.
Molecular geometry
Molecules have fixed equilibrium
geometries—bond lengths and angles— about which
they continuously oscillate through vibrational and rotational
motions. A pure substance is composed of molecules with the same
average geometrical
structure. The chemical formula and the structure of a molecule are
the two important factors that determine its properties,
particularly its reactivity. Isomers share a
chemical formula but normally have very different properties
because of their different structures. Stereoisomers,
a particular type of isomers, may have very similar
physico-chemical properties and at the same time very different
biochemical
activities.
Molecular spectroscopy
Molecular spectroscopy deals with the response
(spectrum)
of molecules interacting with probing signals of known energy (or frequency, according to
Planck's
formula). Scattering
theory provides the theoretical background for
spectroscopy.
The probing signal used in spectoore can be an
electromagnetic
wave or a beam of particles
(electrons, positrons, etc.) The molecular
response can consist of signal absorption (absorption
spectroscopy), the emission of another signal (emission
spectroscopy), fragmentation, or chemical changes.
Spectroscopy is recognized as a powerful tool in
investigating the microscopic properties of
molecules, in particular their energy
levels. In order to extract maximum microscopic information
from experimental results, spectroscopy is often coupled with
chemical
computations.
Theoretical aspects
The study of molecules by molecular
physics and theoretical
chemistry is largely based on quantum
mechanics and is essential for the understanding of the
chemical
bond. The simplest of molecules is the hydrogen
molecule-ion, H2+, and the simplest of all the chemical bonds
is the one-electron
bond. H2+ is composed of two positively-charged protons and one
negatively-charged electron bound by photon exchange, which means that
the Schrödinger
equation for the system can be solved more easily due to the
lack of electron–electron repulsion. With the development of fast
digital computers, approximate solutions for more complicated
molecules became possible and are one of the main aspects of
computational
chemistry.
When trying to define rigorously whether an
arrangement of atoms is "sufficiently stable" to be considered a
molecule, IUPAC suggests that it "must correspond to a depression
on the potential
energy surface that is deep enough to confine at least one
vibrational state".
See also
References
External links
- MoleClues - Molecular science for kids
- Molecular Frontiers - Home Page of Molecular Frontiers Foundation
- Molecule of the Month - School of Chemistry, University of Bristol
- Antibody Molecule - The National Health Museum
- Data Book of Molecules - Home Page for Learning Environmental Chemistry
molecular in Afrikaans: Molekuul
molecular in Tosk Albanian: Molekül
molecular in Arabic: جزيء
molecular in Aragonese: Molecula
molecular in Asturian: Molécula
molecular in Azerbaijani: Molekul
molecular in Bengali: অণু
molecular in Min Nan: Hun-chú
molecular in Belarusian: Малекула
molecular in Bosnian: Molekula
molecular in Bulgarian: Молекула
molecular in Catalan: Molècula
molecular in Czech: Molekula
molecular in Welsh: Moleciwl
molecular in Danish: Molekyle
molecular in German: Molekül
molecular in Lower Sorbian: Molekul
molecular in Estonian: Molekul
molecular in Modern Greek (1453-): Μόριο
molecular in Spanish: Molécula
molecular in Esperanto: Molekulo
molecular in Basque: Molekula
molecular in Persian: مولکول
molecular in Faroese: Mýl
molecular in French: Molécule
molecular in Irish: Móilín
molecular in Galician: Molécula
molecular in Korean: 분자
molecular in Upper Sorbian: Molekul
molecular in Croatian: Molekula
molecular in Ido: Molekulo
molecular in Indonesian: Molekul
molecular in Icelandic: Sameind
molecular in Italian: Molecola
molecular in Hebrew: מולקולה
molecular in Kannada: ಮಹತ್ಕಣ
molecular in Georgian: მოლეკულა
molecular in Kurdish: Molekul
molecular in Latin: Molecula
molecular in Latvian: Molekula
molecular in Lithuanian: Molekulė
molecular in Lombard: Mulécula
molecular in Hungarian: Molekula
molecular in Macedonian: Молекула
molecular in Malayalam: തന്മാത്ര
(രസതന്ത്രം)
molecular in Marathi: रेणू
molecular in Malay (macrolanguage):
Molekul
molecular in Dutch: Molecuul
molecular in Japanese: 分子
molecular in Norwegian: Molekyl
molecular in Norwegian Nynorsk: Molekyl
molecular in Narom: Molétchule
molecular in Novial: Molekule
molecular in Occitan (post 1500): Molecula
molecular in Uzbek: Molekula
molecular in Low German: Molekül
molecular in Polish: Cząsteczka
molecular in Portuguese: Molécula
molecular in Romanian: Moleculă
molecular in Quechua: Iñuwa
molecular in Russian: Молекула
molecular in Albanian: Molekula
molecular in Simple English: Molecule
molecular in Slovak: Molekula
molecular in Slovenian: Molekula
molecular in Serbian: Молекул
molecular in Serbo-Croatian: Molekula
molecular in Sundanese: Molekul
molecular in Finnish: Molekyyli
molecular in Swedish: Molekyl
molecular in Tagalog: Molekula
molecular in Tamil: மூலக்கூறு
molecular in Thai: โมเลกุล
molecular in Vietnamese: Phân tử
molecular in Turkish: Molekül
molecular in Ukrainian: Молекула
molecular in Urdu: سالمہ
molecular in Yiddish: מאלעקול
molecular in Contenese: 分子
molecular in Chinese: 分子