Everything about Amorphous Solid totally explained
An
amorphous solid is a
solid in which there's no
long-range order of the positions of the
atoms. (Solids in which there's long-range atomic order are called
crystalline solids or
morphous). Most classes of solid materials can be found or prepared in an amorphous form. For instance, common window
glass is an amorphous
ceramic, many
polymers (such as
polystyrene) are amorphous, and even foods such as
cotton candy are amorphous solids.
In principle, given a sufficiently high cooling rate, any liquid can be made into an amorphous solid. Cooling reduces molecular mobility. If the cooling rate is faster than the rate at which molecules can organize into a more
thermodynamically favorable crystalline state, then an amorphous solid will be formed. Because of entropy considerations, many polymers can be made amorphous solids by cooling even at slow rates. In contrast, if molecules have sufficient time to organize into a structure with two- or three-dimensional order, then a crystalline (or semi-crystalline) solid will be formed. Water is one example. Because of its small molecular size and ability to quickly rearrange, it can't be made amorphous without resorting to specialized hyperquenching techniques.
Amorphous materials can also be produced by additives which interfere with the ability of the primary constituent to crystallize. For example, addition of
soda to
silicon dioxide results in window glass, and the addition of
glycols to
water results in a
vitrified solid.
Some materials, such as metals, are difficult to prepare in an amorphous state. Unless a material has a high melting temperature (as ceramics do) or a low crystallization energy (as polymers tend to), cooling must be done extremely rapidly. As the cooling is performed, the material changes from a supercooled
liquid, with properties one would expect from a liquid
state material, to a solid. The temperature at which this transition occurs is called the
glass transition temperature or
Tg.
Toward a strict definition
It is difficult to make a distinction between truly amorphous solids and crystalline solids in which the size of the crystals is very small (less than two
nanometres). Even amorphous materials have some short-range order among the atomic positions (over length scales of less than five
nanometres). Furthermore, in very small
crystals a large fraction of the
atoms are located at or near the surface of the crystal; relaxation of the surface and interfacial effects distort the atomic positions, decreasing the structural order. Even the most advanced structural characterization techniques, such as x-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy, have difficulty in distinguishing between amorphous and crystalline structures on these length scales.
The transition from the liquid state to the glass, at a temperature below the equilibrium melting point of the material, is called the
glass transition. It was found that the topology of bonds changes at glass transition from 3D below to fractal (<3) above the glass transition. This change characterises the glass transition as a percolation transition in the system of broken bonds assotiateb by a decrease of
Hausdorff dimension. From a practical point of view, the glass transition temperature is approximately the temperature at which the
viscosity of the liquid exceeds a certain value (about 10
12 Pa·s). The transition temperature depends on cooling rate, with the glass transition occurring at higher temperatures for faster cooling rates. The precise nature of the glass transition is the subject of ongoing research. While it's clear that the glass transition isn't a first-order thermodynamic transition (such as melting), there's debate as to whether it's a higher-order transition, or merely a kinetic effect.
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