crystalline$17969$ - vertaling naar grieks
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crystalline$17969$ - vertaling naar grieks

DISTRIBUTION OF CRYSTALLOGRAPHIC ORIENTATIONS OF A POLYCRYSTALLINE SAMPLE
Crystal texture; Crystalline texture; Orientation distribution function; Texture (crystalline)
  • forged]] [[connecting rod]] that has been etched to show grain flow.
  • doi-access=free }}</ref>

crystalline      
adj. κρυστάλλινος, κρυσταλικός
prickly heat         
  • Miliaria rubra in a forehead
HUMAN DISEASE
Prickly Heat; Prickly heat; Heat rash; Sweat rash; Hat rash; Summar rash; Miliaria crystallina; Sudamina; Miliaria rubra; Miliaria pustulosa; Miliaria profunda; Postmiliarial hypohidrosis; Tropical anhidrotic asthenia; Occlusion miliaria; Colloid milium; Apocrine miliaria; Miliaria crystalline; Acquired colloid milium; Heatrash
κνησμός

Definitie

Semicrystalline
·adj Half crystalline;
- said of certain cruptive rocks composed partly of crystalline, partly of amorphous matter.

Wikipedia

Texture (chemistry)

In physical chemistry and materials science, texture is the distribution of crystallographic orientations of a polycrystalline sample (it is also part of the geological fabric). A sample in which these orientations are fully random is said to have no distinct texture. If the crystallographic orientations are not random, but have some preferred orientation, then the sample has a weak, moderate or strong texture. The degree is dependent on the percentage of crystals having the preferred orientation.

Texture is seen in almost all engineered materials, and can have a great influence on materials properties. The texture forms in materials during thermo-mechanical processes, for example during production processes e.g. rolling. Consequently, the rolling process is often followed by a heat treatment to reduce the amount of unwanted texture. Controlling the production process in combination with the characterization of texture and the material's microstructure help to determine the materials properties, i.e. the processing-microstructure-texture-property relationship. Also, geologic rocks show texture due to their thermo-mechanic history of formation processes.

One extreme case is a complete lack of texture: a solid with perfectly random crystallite orientation will have isotropic properties at length scales sufficiently larger than the size of the crystallites. The opposite extreme is a perfect single crystal, which likely has anisotropic properties by geometric necessity.