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Davidflakejr
30th June 2012, 01:56 AM
If a crystalline material is heated to the point that the crystallites are in random order, isnt that "by definition" in an amorphous state?

rickbatey
1st July 2012, 04:40 AM
It's their cooled state and how they behave that determine if they are semi-crystalline or amorphous. Remember that steel changes from body centered to face centered cubic structure when heated (boy, THAT was from early college MANY years ago).
Rick.

Davidflakejr
1st July 2012, 02:56 PM
agreed, yet this caused much debate among the process techs at work.

Suhas
1st July 2012, 04:06 PM
The morphology (amorphous or crystalline) is the state in which a particular material exists. Example, H20 is ice when it is crystalline and is below 32 deg F, water when it is liquid between 32 and 212 deg F and and steam when it is gaseous above 212 deg F. Similarly, if you have a material with crystallites in there then it is in the crystalline state, but if you subject it to a temperature where the crystallites are gone, then it is in the amorphous state. For LCPs (Liquid Crystalline Polymers), the molecules have some orientation & arrangement even in the melt and hence the melt is considered crystalline (so the name Liquid Crystalline Polymer).
The main thing here to remember that it is a state just as state of humans - happy, angry, sad, etc :o :( :mad: :rolleyes:
Regards,
Suhas