Two-dimensional Defects
The two-dimensional defects that appear in crystals can be usefully divided into
three types: free surfaces, which are the external surfaces at which the solid terminates at
a vapor or liquid, intercrystalline boundaries, which separate grains or distinct phases
within the solid, and internal defects that disrupt the crystalline pattern over a surface
within a crystal. All of these defects have two important characteristics. First, since they
are surfaces in a crystal they have particular atomic structures that depend on orientation.
Second, they have a positive energy. The energy per unit area is ordinarily equal to the
surface tension, ß, of the interface.
- Parte del discurso: proper noun
- Industria/ámbito: Ciencia de los materiales; Ingeniería
- Categoría: Metalurgia; Ingeniería mecánica
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Creador
- Naveed
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(Multan, Pakistan)