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∙ 11y agoIn an amorphous solid, the particle arrangement on both a macroscopic and microscopic scale has no periodicity, it is literally amorphous.
On a crystalline solid, the particles arrangement is neat and ordered. There is a periodicity to the particles.
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∙ 11y agoIn an amorphous solid, the particles are arranged randomly without a long-range order, making them more disordered. In contrast, in a crystalline solid, the particles are arranged in a repeating and well-defined pattern, leading to a more ordered structure with long-range order.
amphorous solid
The way it breaks
Camphor is a crystalline solid.
A solid that consists of densely packed atoms but lacks a crystalline structure is called an amorphous solid. A solid that is composed of microscopic crystals is said to be aphanitic.
The characteristic that could distinguish a crystalline solid from an amorphous solid is the orderly arrangement of particles in a repetitive, three-dimensional pattern in crystalline solids, whereas amorphous solids lack this long-range order and have a more random arrangement of particles. This results in crystalline solids having a definite melting point, sharp diffraction patterns, and characteristic shapes, while amorphous solids have a gradual softening over a range of temperatures, no regular diffraction patterns, and lack distinct shapes.
crystalline solid has a regular pattern in particles and amorphous solids dont
amphorous solid
Glass is a amorphous solid because they have large particles but randomly arranged
Particles have an orderly arrangement in crystalline solids.
The main characteristic that distinguishes a crystalline solid from an amorphous solid is the arrangement of particles. Crystalline solids have a well-defined, repeated geometric pattern in the arrangement of their particles, giving them a regular and uniform structure. In contrast, amorphous solids lack this long-range order and have a more disordered arrangement of particles.
Solid!
The two different types of solid are crystalline solids, which have a well-defined structure with particles arranged in a repeating pattern, and amorphous solids, which have a random arrangement of particles without a well-defined structure.
The way it breaks
A solid with an irregular pattern of particles is called an amorphous solid. Unlike crystalline solids, which have a regular and repeating pattern of particles, amorphous solids have particles arranged in a random and disordered manner. Examples of amorphous solids include glass and some types of plastics.
Amorphous means having a non-crystalline structure.* A crystalline solid is a solid that is made up of crystals in which particles are arranged in a regular repeating pattern called a lattice. Amorphous solids do not have regular crystalline molecular structures.
Particles do not have an orderly arrangement in an amorphous solid. In amorphous solids, the particles are arranged randomly, unlike in crystalline solids where the particles have a well-defined, repeating pattern. Examples of amorphous solids include glass and certain plastics.
Camphor is a crystalline solid.