Microscopic Description: Solid Is One of
Microscopic Description: Solid Is One of
1Microscopic description
2Classes of solids
2.1Metals
2.2Minerals
2.3Ceramics
2.4Glass ceramics
2.5Organic solids
2.5.1Wood
2.5.2Polymers
2.6Composite materials
2.7Semiconductors
2.8Nanomaterials
2.9Biomaterials
3Physical properties
3.1Mechanical
3.2Thermal
3.3Electrical
3.3.1Electro-mechanical
3.4Optical
3.4.1Opto-electronic
4References
5External links
Microscopic description[edit]
The atoms, molecules or ions which make up solids may be arranged in an orderly repeating pattern, or irregularly. Materials whose constituents are arranged in a regular
pattern are known as crystals. In some cases, the regular ordering can continue unbroken over a large scale, for example diamonds, where each diamond is a single crystal.
Solid objects that are large enough to see and handle are rarely composed of a single crystal, but instead are made of a large number of single crystals, known as crystallites,
whose size can vary from a few nanometers to several meters. Such materials are called polycrystalline. Almost all common metals, and many ceramics, are polycrystalline.
Schematic representation of a random-network glassy form (left) and ordered crystalline lattice (right) of identical chemical composition.
In other materials, there is no long-range order in the position of the atoms. These solids are known as amorphous solids; examples include polystyrene and glass.
Whether a solid is crystalline or amorphous depends on the material involved, and the conditions in which it was formed. Solids which are formed by slow cooling will tend to be
crystalline, while solids which are frozen rapidly are more likely to be amorphous. Likewise, the specific crystal structure adopted by a crystalline solid depends on the material
involved and on how it was formed.
While many common objects, such as an ice cube or a coin, are chemically identical throughout, many other common materials comprise a number of different substances
packed together. For example, a typical rock is an aggregate of several different minerals and mineraloids, with no specific chemical composition. Wood is a natural organic
material consisting primarily of cellulose fibers embedded in a matrix of organic lignin. In materials science, composites of more than one constituent material can be designed to
have desired properties.
Classes of solids[edit]
Further information: Bonding in solids
The forces between the atoms in a solid can take a variety of forms. For example, a crystal of sodium chloride(common salt) is made up of ionic sodium and chlorine, which are
held together by ionic bonds. In diamond or silicon, the atoms share electrons and form covalent bonds. In metals, electrons are shared in metallic bonding. Some solids,
particularly most organic compounds, are held together with van der Waals forces resulting from the polarization of the electronic charge cloud on each molecule. The
dissimilarities between the types of solid result from the differences between their bonding.
Metals[edit]
Main article: Metal
The pinnacle of New York'sChrysler Building, the world's tallest steel-supported brick building, is clad with stainless steel.
Metals typically are strong, dense, and good conductors of both electricityand heat. The bulk of the elements in the periodic table, those to the left of a diagonal line drawn
from boron to polonium, are metals. Mixtures of two or more elements in which the major component is a metal are known as alloys.
People have been using metals for a variety of purposes since prehistoric times. The strength and reliability of metals has led to their widespread use in construction of buildings
and other structures, as well as in most vehicles, many appliances and tools, pipes, road signs and railroad tracks. Iron and aluminium are the two most commonly used
structural metals, and they are also the most abundant metals in the Earth's crust. Iron is most commonly used in the form of an alloy, steel, which contains up to 2.1% carbon,
making it much harder than pure iron.
Because metals are good conductors of electricity, they are valuable inelectrical appliances and for carrying an electric current over long distances with little energy loss or
dissipation. Thus, electrical power grids rely on metal cables to distribute electricity. Home electrical systems, for example, are wired with copper for its good conducting
properties and easy machinability. The high thermal conductivity of most metals also makes them useful for stovetop cooking utensils.
The study of metallic elements and their alloys makes up a significant portion of the fields of solid-state chemistry, physics, materials science and engineering.
Metallic solids are held together by a high density of shared, delocalized electrons, known as "metallic bonding". In a metal, atoms readily lose their outermost
("valence") electrons, forming positive ions. The free electrons are spread over the entire solid, which is held together firmly by electrostatic interactions between the ions and
the electron cloud.[1] The large number of free electrons gives metals their high values of electrical and thermal conductivity. The free electrons also prevent transmission of
visible light, making metals opaque, shiny andlustrous.
More advanced models of metal properties consider the effect of the positive ions cores on the delocalised electrons. As most metals have crystalline structure, those ions are
usually arranged into a periodic lattice. Mathematically, the potential of the ion cores can be treated by various models, the simplest being the nearly free electron model.
Minerals[edit]
Ceramics[edit]
Glass ceramics[edit]
Main article: Glass-ceramic
Glass-ceramic materials share many properties with both non-crystalline glasses and crystalline ceramics. They are formed as a glass, and then partially crystallized by heat
treatment, producing both amorphous andcrystalline phases so that crystalline grains are embedded within a non-crystalline intergranular phase.
Glass-ceramics are used to make cookware (originally known by the brand name CorningWare) and stovetops which have both high resistance to thermal shock and extremely
low permeability to liquids. The negative coefficient of thermal expansion of the crystalline ceramic phase can be balanced with the positive coefficient of the glassy phase. At a
certain point (~70% crystalline) the glass-ceramic has a net coefficient of thermal expansion close to zero. This type of glass-ceramic exhibits excellent mechanical properties
and can sustain repeated and quick temperature changes up to 1000 C.
Glass ceramics may also occur naturally when lightning strikes the crystalline (e.g. quartz) grains found in most beach sand. In this case, the extreme and immediate heat of the
lightning (~2500 C) creates hollow, branching rootlike structures called fulgurite via fusion.
Organic solids[edit]
Main article: Organic chemistry
The individual wood pulp fibers in this sample are around 10 m in diameter.
Organic chemistry studies the structure, properties, composition, reactions, and preparation by synthesis (or other means) of chemical compounds of carbon and hydrogen,
which may contain any number of other elements such as nitrogen, oxygen and the halogens:fluorine, chlorine, bromine and iodine. Some organic compounds may also contain
the elements phosphorus or sulfur. Examples of organic solids include wood, paraffin wax, naphthalene and a wide variety of polymers and plastics.
Wood
[edit]