Chemistry, asked by aarefachand1, 3 months ago

explain amorphous solid who ever ans fast and write i will make him brainlist​

Answers

Answered by ns3991813
0

Answer:

An amorphous or non-crystalline solid is a solid that lacks the long-range order characteristic of a crystal. E.g glass, plastic.

Answered by satyadevsms33
0

Answer:

Amorphous solid, any noncrystalline solid in which the atoms and molecules are not organized in a definite lattice pattern. Such solids include glass, plastic, and gel.

Solids and liquids are both forms of condensed matter; both are composed of atoms in close proximity to each other. But their properties are, of course, enormously different. While a solid material has both a well-defined volume and a well-defined shape, a liquid has a well-defined volume but a shape that depends on the shape of the container. Stated differently, a solid exhibits resistance to shear stress while a liquid does not. Externally applied forces can twist or bend or distort a solid’s shape, but (provided the forces have not exceeded the solid’s elastic limit) it “springs back” to its original shape when the forces are removed. A liquid flows under the action of an external force; it does not hold its shape. These macroscopic characteristics constitute the essential distinctions: a liquid flows, lacks a definite shape (though its volume is definite), and cannot withstand a shear stress; a solid does not flow, has a definite shape, and exhibits elastic stiffness against shear stress.

On an atomic level, these macroscopic distinctions arise from a basic difference in the nature of the atomic motion

Similar questions