
Part I - Structure
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
Summary
STRUCTURE
Picture with me an old cottage nestled in the woods. There is a small house built of clay bricks that were thoughtfully stacked and interlaced by a master bricklayer so as to produce a repeated interlocking pattern. The house has a thatched roof consisting of bundles of straw. The straws in each bundle are oriented in a common direction to direct rainwater off the roof, and are lashed together with twine. Around the house is a garden enclosed by a stone wall. Like the brick walls of the house, the stones in the wall are bonded together with mortar. But unlike the bricks, the stones lack any sense of a repeating pattern.
In this part of the textbook, we examine the basic structures that are found in condensed matter as well as the forces (the mortar and twine) that maintain these structures over long time periods. For our purposes, structures are divided into two main categories: ordered (like the bricks and the straw of the house) and disordered (like the stones in the garden wall).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Fundamentals of Condensed Matter and Crystalline PhysicsAn Introduction for Students of Physics and Materials Science, pp. 1 - 2Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012