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Crystalline
Material in which the atoms are situated in a repeating or periodic array over large atomic distances
Crystal structure
Manner in which atoms, ions, or molecules are spatially arranged
Face-centered cubic (FCC)
Has atoms located at each of the corners and the centers of all cube faces
Coordination number
Number of nearest-neighbor or touching atoms
Atomic packing factor (APF)
Sum of sphere volumes of all atoms within a cell divided by the until cell volume
Body-centered cubic (BCC)
Has eight corner atoms and a single atom in the middle
Hexagonal close-packed (HCP)
Has top and bottom faces of the unit cell that consist of six atoms that form a hexagon and surround a single atom
Cations
Positively charged because they have given up their valence electrons
Anions
Negatively charged because they received valence electrons
Polymorphism
When metals or nonmetals have more than one crystal structure
Allotropy
Elemental solid condition
- crystal structure depends on both the temperature and pressure (external)
Lattice parameters
The parameters in which unit cell geometry is defined
Crystal system
Seven possible combinations
-cubic, tetragonal, hexagonal, orthorhombic, rhombohedral (trigonal), monoclinic, triclinic
Family of directions
Group of directors that are all crystallographically equivalent
Single crystal
When the periodic and repeated arrangement of atoms is perfect or extends throughout the entirety of the specimen without interruption
Anisotropy
When the physical properties of single crystals of some substances depend on the crystallographic direction in which measurements are taken
Isotrophic
Substances in which measure properties are independent of the direction of measurement
Diffractiuon
Occurs when a wave encounters a series of regularly spaced obstacles that are capable of scattering the wave and have spacing that are comparable in magnitude to the wavelength
Bragg's Law
Magnitude of the distance between two adjacent and parallel planes of atoms is a function of miller indices
Noncrystalline
Solids that lack a systematic and regular arrangement of atoms over relatively large atomic distances
Amorphous
Means "without form"
Unsaturated
Molecules that have double and triple covalent bonds
Saturated
Has all single bonds
Macromolecules
Polymers alternate name due to their size
Repeat units
Structural entities that long molecules are composed of
Polymer
Means "many Mers"
Monomer
Refers to the small molecule from which a polymer is synthesized
Homopolymer
When all the repeating units along a chain are the same type
Copolymer
Composed of two or more different repeat units
Bifunctional monomers
Form a two-dimensional chain like molecular structure
Functionality
The number of bonds a polymer can form
Degree of polymerization
Another way to express average chain size
Linear polymers
Those in which the repeat units are joined together end to end in single chains
Branched polymers
Polymers that are synthesized in which side-branch chains are connected to the main ones
Cross-linked polymers
Adjacent linear chains that are joined one another at various positions by covalent bonds
Network polymers
Multifunctional monomers forming three or more active covalent bonds that make three-dimensional networks
Stereoisomerism
Denotes the situation in which atoms are in the same order but differ in their spatial arrangements
Isotactic configuration
When all of the R groups are situated on the same side of the chain
Syndiotactic configuration
When all of the R groups alternate sides of the chain
Atactic configuration
Random positioning of the R group
Cis structure
CH3 and H atom are on the same side of the double bond
Trans structure
CH3 and H on different side of the double bond
Random copolymer
Two different units randomly dispersed along the chain
Alternating copolymer
Two repeat units alternate chain positions
Block copolymer
Identical repeat units clustered in blocks along the chain
Graft polymer
Homopolymer side branches of one type may be grafted to homopolymer main chains that are composed of a different repeat unit
Polymer crystallinity
The packing of molecular chains to produce an ordered atomic array
Crystallites
Small crystalline regions that make up semicrystalline polymers
Chain-folded model
Molecular chains within each platelet fold back and forth on themselves
Spherulite
Bulk polymers that crystallized from a melt are semicrystalline and form this structure
Point defects
Associated with one or two atomic positions
Linear defects
One dimensional
Self-interstital
Atom from the crystal that is crowded in an interstitial site
-small void space that under ordinary circumstances is not occupied
Defect structure
Often used to designate the types and concentrations of atomic defects in ceramics
Electroneutrality
State that exists when there are equal numbers of positive and negative charges from the ions
Frenkel defect
Defect that involves a cation-vacancy and a cation-interstitial pair
Schottky defect
Found in AX materials and is a cation vacancy-anion vacancy pair