two-component eutectic - meaning and definition. What is two-component eutectic
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What (who) is two-component eutectic - definition

HOMOGENEOUS MIXTURE OF SUBSTANCES THAT MELTS OR SOLIDIFIES AT A SINGLE TEMPERATURE THAT IS LOWER THAN THE MELTING POINT OF EITHER OF THE CONSTITUENTS
Eutectoid; Peritectic; Eutectic solution; Eutectic mixture; Eutectic temperature; Peritectoid; Eutectic (Chemistry); Eutectic; Eutectics; Eutectic composition; Eutecticum; Peritecticum; Eutectic salt; Hypoeutectic alloy; Eutectic alloy; Eutectic freezing; Eutectic Point; Eutectic point; Hypoeutectic; Hypereutectic; Eutectic Mixture; Eutectic systems; Eutectoid Point
  • A phase diagram for a fictitious binary chemical mixture (with the two components denoted by ''A'' and ''B'') used to depict the eutectic composition, temperature, and point. (''L'' denotes the liquid state.)
  • Iron–carbon phase diagram, showing the eutectoid transformation between austenite (γ) and pearlite.
  • Solid–liquid phase change of ethanol–water mixtures
  • Gold–aluminium [[phase diagram]]
  • Four eutectic structures: A) lamellar B) rod-like C) globular D) acicular.

Two-component regulatory system         
SERVES AS A BASIC STIMULUS-RESPONSE COUPLING MECHANISM TO ALLOW ORGANISMS TO SENSE AND RESPOND TO CHANGES IN MANY DIFFERENT ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS
Two-component regulation systems; Two-component system; Two component system; P2CS; Signal transduction histidine kinase
In the field of molecular biology, a two-component regulatory system serves as a basic stimulus-response coupling mechanism to allow organisms to sense and respond to changes in many different environmental conditions. Two-component systems typically consist of a membrane-bound histidine kinase that senses a specific environmental stimulus and a corresponding response regulator that mediates the cellular response, mostly through differential expression of target genes.
Eutectic         
·add. ·adj Of maximum fusibility;
- said of an alloy or mixture which has the lowest melting point which it is possible to obtain by the combination of the given components.
Eutectic system         
A eutectic system ( ) from the Greek ( 'well') and ( 'melting'), also known as a eutectic mixture, is a homogeneous mixture of substances that melts or solidifies at a single temperature that is lower than the melting point of any of the constituents. This temperature is known as the eutectic temperature, and is the lowest possible melting temperature over all of the mixing ratios for the involved component species.

Wikipedia

Eutectic system

A eutectic system or eutectic mixture ( yoo-TEK-tik) is a homogeneous mixture that has a melting point lower than those of the constituents. The lowest possible melting point over all of the mixing ratios of the constituents is called the eutectic temperature. On a phase diagram, the eutectic temperature is seen as the eutectic point (see plot on the right).

Non-eutectic mixture ratios would have different melting temperatures for their different constituents, since one component's lattice will melt at a lower temperature than the other's. Conversely, as a non-eutectic mixture cools down, each of its components would solidify (form a lattice) at a different temperature, until the entire mass is solid.

Not all binary alloys have eutectic points, since the valence electrons of the component species are not always compatible, in any mixing ratio, to form a new type of joint crystal lattice. For example, in the silver-gold system the melt temperature (liquidus) and freeze temperature (solidus) "meet at the pure element endpoints of the atomic ratio axis while slightly separating in the mixture region of this axis".

The term eutectic was coined in 1884 by British physicist and chemist Frederick Guthrie (1833–1886). The word originates from the Greek εὐ- ( 'well') and τῆξῐς (têxis 'melting').