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Mesoscopic Disorder

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 November 2013

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Disorder characterizes most of the materials that surround us in nature. Despite their great technological importance, materials with ordered crystalline structures are relatively rare. Examples of disordered materials, however, abound, and their forms can be as varied as their number. The paper on which these words are printed has a disordered structure composed of a highly interconnected network of fibers. It has also been coated with particulate materials to improve its properties and the visibility of the ink. The reading glasses you may require to focus on these words are composed of a glass or polymer material that is disordered on a molecular level. Even the structure of your hand holding this magazine is disordered. These and virtually all other disordered materials are typically parameterized by a characteristic length scale. Above this length scale, the material is homogeneous and the effects of the disorder are not directly manifest; below this characteristic length the disorder of the structure dominates, directly affecting the properties.

The range of characteristic length scales for the disordered materials around us is immense. For the glass or polymer of your reading glasses, it is microscopic; the disorder is apparent only at the molecular level, while above this level the material is homogeneous. For the paper on which this magazine is printed, the scale is larger; the paper is white partly because the disordered fiber network has within it structures that are comparable in size to the wavelength of light, resulting in strong scattering of the light.

Type
Mesoscopic Disorder
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1994

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