The Structure of Materials
1. Edition February 1999
XVI, 448 Pages, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Short Description
With the tremendous array of experimental tools available today to scientists and engineers for studying the structure of materials, structural arrangements for crystalline and noncrystalline materials, and liquid crystals can be described with great accuracy. This book specializes in the structure of materials, and focuses solely on the three different states of solid condensed matter-glasses, crystals, and liquid crystals-and develop a set of tools for describing all of them. Treatment includes glasses, crystals, liquid crystals, imperfections in ordered media, and microstructure. This book uses a more concise and consistent approach with the way materials scientists and engineers need to think about materials in order to select them and use them to their best advantage.
Are You Looking for a Unified and Concise Approach to Teaching and Learning the Structure of Materials? Allen and Thomas present information in a manner consistent with the way future scientists and engineers will be required to think about materials' selection, design, and use. Students will learn the fundamentals of three different states of condensed matter-glasses, crystals, and liquid crystals-and develop a set of tools for describing all of them. Above all, they'll gain a better understanding of the principles of structure common to all materials. Key concepts, such as symmetry theory, are introduced and applied to provide a common viewpoint for describing structures of ceramic, metallic, and polymeric materials. Structure-sensitive properties of real materials are introduced. The text also includes a variety of worked example problems. Other texts available in the MIT Series: Thermodynamics of Materials, Vol I, Ragone, 30885-4 Thermodynamics of Materials, Vol II: Kinetics, Ragone, 30886-2 Physical Ceramics: Principles for Ceramics Science and Engineering, Chiang, Birnie, Kingery, 59873-9 Electronic Properties of Engineering Materials, Livingston, 31627-X
Noncrystalline State.
Crystalline State.
Liquid-Crystalline State.
Imperfections in Ordered Media.
Microstructure.
Index.