1/94
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced | Call with Kai |
|---|
No analytics yet
Send a link to your students to track their progress
atomic number (Z)
For a chemical element, the number of protons within the atomic nucleus.
isotope
Atoms of the same element that have different atomic masses.
atomic weight (A)
The weighted average of the atomic masses of an atom's naturally occurring isotopes. It may be expressed in terms of atomic mass units (on an atomic basis), or the mass per mole of atoms.
atomic mass unit (amu)
A measure of atomic mass; 1/12 of the mass of an atom of ¹²C.
mole
The quantity of a substance corresponding to 6.022 × 10²³ atoms or molecules.
quantum mechanics
A branch of physics that deals with atomic and subatomic systems; it allows only discrete values of energy. By contrast, for classical mechanics, continuous energy values are permissible.
Bohr atomic model
An early atomic model in which electrons are assumed to revolve around the nucleus in discrete orbitals.
wave mechanical model
An atomic model in which electrons are treated as being wavelike.
quantum number
A set of four numbers, the values of which are used to label possible electron states. Three of the quantum numbers are integers that specify the size, shape, and spatial orientation of an electron's probability density; the fourth number designates spin orientation.
electron state (level)
One of a set of discrete, quantized energies that are allowed for electrons. In the atomic case, each state is specified by four quantum numbers.
Pauli exclusion principle
The postulate that for an individual atom, at most two electrons, which necessarily have opposite spins, can occupy the same state.
ground state
A normally filled electron energy state from which an electron excitation may occur.
electron configuration
For an atom, the manner in which possible electron states are filled with electrons.
valence electron
The electrons in the outermost occupied electron shell, which participate in interatomic bonding.
periodic table
The arrangement of the chemical elements with increasing atomic number according to the periodic variation in electron structure. Nonmetallic elements are positioned at the far right-hand side of the table.
electropositive
For an atom, having a tendency to release valence electrons. Also used to describe metallic elements.
electronegative
For an atom, having a tendency to accept valence electrons. Also used to describe nonmetallic elements.
bonding energy
The energy required to separate two atoms that are chemically bonded to each other. It may be expressed on a per-atom basis or per mole of atoms.
primary bonds
Interatomic bonds that are relatively strong and for which bonding energies are relatively large. Primary bonding types are ionic, covalent, and metallic.
ionic bond
A coulombic interatomic bond that exists between two adjacent and oppositely charged ions.
coulombic force
A force between charged particles such as ions; the force is attractive when the particles are of opposite charge.
covalent bond
A primary interatomic bond that is formed by the sharing of electrons between neighboring atoms.
metallic bond
A primary interatomic bond involving the nondirectional sharing of nonlocalized valence electrons ("sea of electrons") that are mutually shared by all the atoms in the metallic solid.
secondary bonds
Interatomic and intermolecular bonds that are relatively weak and for which bonding energies are relatively small. Normally, atomic or molecular dipoles are involved. Examples of secondary bonding types are van der Waals forces and hydrogen bonding.
van der Waals bond
A secondary interatomic bond between adjacent molecular dipoles that may be permanent or induced.
dipole (electric)
A pair of equal and opposite electrical charges separated by a small distance.
hydrogen bond
A strong secondary interatomic bond that exists between a bound hydrogen atom (its unscreened proton) and the electrons of adjacent atoms.
polar molecule
A molecule in which there exists a permanent electric dipole moment by virtue of the asymmetrical distribution of positively and negatively charged regions.
crystalline
The state of a solid material characterized by a periodic and repeating three-dimensional array of atoms, ions, or molecules.
crystal structure
For crystalline materials, the manner in which atoms or ions are arrayed in space. It is defined in terms of the unit cell geometry and the atom positions within the unit cell.
lattice
The regular geometrical arrangement of points in crystal space.
unit cell
The basic structural unit of a crystal structure. It is generally defined in terms of atom (or ion) positions within a parallelepiped volume.
face-centered cubic (FCC)
A crystal structure found in some common elemental metals. Within the cubic unit cell, atoms are located at all corner and face-centered positions.
coordination number
The number of atomic or ionic nearest neighbors.
atomic packing factor (APF)
The fraction of the volume of a unit cell that is occupied by hard-sphere atoms or ions.
body-centered cubic (BCC)
A common crystal structure found in some elemental metals. Within the cubic unit cell, atoms are located at corner and cell center positions.
hexagonal close-packed (HCP)
A crystal structure found for some metals. The HCP unit cell is of hexagonal geometry and is generated by the stacking of close-packed planes of atoms.
polymorphism
The ability of a solid material to exist in more than one form or crystal structure.
allotropy
The possibility of the existence of two or more different crystal structures for a substance (generally an elemental solid).
lattice parameters
The combination of unit cell edge lengths and interaxial angles that defines the unit cell geometry.
crystal system
A scheme by which crystal structures are classified according to unit cell geometry. This geometry is specified in terms of the relationships between edge lengths and interaxial angles. There are seven different crystal systems.
Miller indices
A set of three integers (four for hexagonal) that designate crystallographic planes, as determined from reciprocals of fractional axial intercepts.
single crystal
A crystalline solid for which the periodic and repeated atomic pattern extends throughout its entirety without interruption.
grain
An individual crystal in a polycrystalline metal or ceramic.
polycrystalline
Crystalline materials composed of more than one crystal or grain.
grain boundary
The interface separating two adjoining grains having different crystallographic orientations.
anisotropic
Exhibiting different values of a property in different crystallographic directions.
isotropic
Having identical values of a property in all crystallographic directions.
diffraction (x-ray)
Constructive interference of x-ray beams scattered by atoms of a crystal.
Bragg's law
A relationship that stipulates the condition for diffraction by a set of crystallographic planes.
noncrystalline
The solid state in which there is no long-range atomic order. Sometimes the terms amorphous, glassy, and vitreous are used synonymously.
amorphous
Having a noncrystalline structure.
imperfection
A deviation from perfection; normally applied to crystalline materials in which there is a deviation from atomic/molecular order and/or continuity.
point defect
A crystalline defect associated with one or, at most, several atomic sites.
vacancy
A normally occupied lattice site from which an atom or ion is missing.
Boltzmann's constant (k)
A thermal energy constant having the value of 1.38 × 10⁻²³ J/atom·K (8.62 × 10⁻⁵ eV/atom·K).
self-interstitial
A host atom or ion positioned on an interstitial lattice site.
alloy
A metallic substance that is composed of two or more elements.
solid solution
A homogeneous crystalline phase that contains two or more chemical species. Both substitutional and interstitial solid solutions are possible.
solute
One component or element of a solution present in a minor concentration. It is dissolved in the solvent.
solvent
The component of a solution present in the greatest amount. It is the component that dissolves a solute.
substitutional solid solution
A solid solution in which the solute atoms replace or substitute for the host atoms.
interstitial solid solution
A solid solution in which relatively small solute atoms occupy interstitial positions between the solvent or host atoms.
composition (Cᵢ)
The relative content of a particular element or constituent within an alloy, usually expressed in weight percent or atom percent.
weight percent (wt%)
A concentration specification on the basis of weight (or mass) of a particular element relative to the total alloy weight (or mass).
atom percent (at%)
A concentration specification on the basis of the number of moles (or atoms) of a particular element relative to the total number of moles (or atoms) of all elements within an alloy.
edge dislocation
A linear crystalline defect associated with the lattice distortion produced in the vicinity of the end of an extra half-plane of atoms within a crystal. The Burgers vector is perpendicular to the dislocation line.
dislocation line
The line that extends along the end of the extra half-plane of atoms for an edge dislocation and along the center of the spiral of a screw dislocation.
screw dislocation
A linear crystalline defect associated with the lattice distortion created when normally parallel planes are joined together to form a helical ramp. The Burgers vector is parallel to the dislocation line.
mixed dislocation
A dislocation that has both edge and screw components.
Burgers vector (b)
A vector that denotes the magnitude and direction of lattice distortion associated with a dislocation.
atomic vibration
The vibration of an atom about its normal position in a substance.
microstructure
The structural features of an alloy (e.g., grain and phase structure) subject to observation under a microscope.
microscopy
The investigation of microstructural elements using some type of microscope.
photomicrograph
A photograph made with a microscope that records a microstructural image.
transmission electron microscope (TEM)
A microscope that produces an image by using electron beams that are transmitted (pass through) the specimen. Examination of internal features at high magnifications is possible.
scanning electron microscope (SEM)
A microscope that produces an image by using an electron beam that scans the surface of a specimen; an image is produced by reflected electron beams. Examination of surface and/or microstructural features at high magnifications is possible.
scanning probe microscope (SPM)
A microscope that does not produce an image using light radiation. Rather, a very small and sharp probe raster scans across the specimen surface; out-of-surface plane deflections in response to electronic or other interactions with the probe are monitored, from which a topographical map of the specimen surface (on a nanometer scale) is produced.
grain size
The average grain diameter as determined from a random cross section.
diffusion
Mass transport by atomic motion.
interdiffusion
Diffusion of atoms of one metal into another metal.
self-diffusion
Atomic migration in pure metals.
vacancy diffusion
The diffusion mechanism in which net atomic migration is from a lattice site to an adjacent vacancy.
interstitial diffusion
A diffusion mechanism by which atomic motion is from interstitial site to interstitial site.
diffusion flux (J)
The quantity of mass diffusing through and perpendicular to a unit cross-sectional area of material per unit time.
Fick's first law
The diffusion flux is proportional to the concentration gradient. This relationship is used for steady-state diffusion situations.
diffusion coefficient (D)
The constant of proportionality between the diffusion flux and the concentration gradient in Fick's first law. Its magnitude is indicative of the rate of atomic diffusion.
steady-state diffusion
The diffusion condition for which there is no net accumulation or depletion of diffusing species. The diffusion flux is independent of time.
concentration profile
The curve that results when the concentration of a chemical species is plotted versus position in a material.
concentration gradient (dC/dx)
The slope of the concentration profile at a specific position.
driving force
The impetus behind a reaction, such as diffusion, grain growth, or a phase transformation. Usually attendant to the reaction is a reduction in some type of energy (e.g., free energy).
nonsteady-state diffusion
The diffusion condition for which there is some net accumulation or depletion of diffusing species. The diffusion flux is dependent on time.
Fick's second law
The time rate of change of concentration is proportional to the second derivative of concentration. This relationship is used in nonsteady-state diffusion situations.
carburizing
The process by which the surface carbon concentration of a ferrous alloy is increased by diffusion from the surrounding environment.
activation energy (Q)
The energy required to initiate a reaction, such as diffusion.