Chemistry, asked by jaswinder8674, 1 year ago

Crystalline solids are anisotropic in nature explain

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Some crystalline solids are anisotropic because despite showing periodicity they are not exactly the same in all directions. It all depends on the symmetry of the unit cell of the crystal. If its size in the x, y and z direction is the same, it would be isotropic and anisotropic otherwise.

Answered by Riya1045
0

Crystalline solids are anisotropic in nature, that is, some of their physical properties like electrical resistance or refractive index show different values when measured along different directions in the same crystals. This arises from different arrangement of particles in different directions.

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