Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Crystallite> ?p ?o }
- Crystallite abstract "Polycrystalline or multicrystalline materials, or polycrystals are solids that are composed of many crystallites of varying size and orientation. Crystallites are also referred to as grains. They are small or even microscopic crystals and form during the cooling of many materials. Their orientation can be random with no preferred direction, called random texture, or directed, possibly due to growth and processing conditions. Fiber texture is an example of the latter. The areas where crystallite grains meet are known as grain boundaries.Most inorganic solids are polycrystalline, including all common metals, many ceramics, rocks and ice. The extent to which a solid is crystalline (crystallinity) has important effects on its physical properties. Sulfur, while usually polycrystalline, may also occur in other allotropic forms with completely different properties. Although crystallites are referred to as grains, powder grains are different, as they can be composed of smaller polycrystalline grains themselves.While the structure of a (monocrystalline) crystal is highly ordered and its lattice is continuous and unbroken, amorphous materials, such as glass and polymers, are non-crystalline and do not display any structures as their constituents are not arranged in an ordered manner. Polycrystalline structures and paracrystalline phases are in between these two extremes.".
- Crystallite thumbnail Compilation_of_polycrystalline_structures_composed_of_crystallites.jpg?width=300.
- Crystallite wikiPageID "365435".
- Crystallite wikiPageLength "12237".
- Crystallite wikiPageOutDegree "70".
- Crystallite wikiPageRevisionID "698157285".
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Abnormal_grain_growth.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Allotropy.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Alloy.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Amorphous_solid.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Bit.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Crystals.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Category:Metallurgy.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Ceramic.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Continuum_mechanics.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Corrosion.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Creep_(deformation).
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Crystal.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Crystal_structure.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Crystallinity.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Crystallite.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Crystallography.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Diffusion.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Directional_solidification.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Dislocation.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Ferromagnetism.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Fiber.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Fracture.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Gemstone.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Grain_boundary.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Grain_boundary_strengthening.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Intergranular_fracture.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Isotropy.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Journal_of_Research_of_the_National_Institute_of_Standards_and_Technology.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Lava.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Magnetic_domain.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Metal.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Microlite.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Microscopy.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Monocrystalline_silicon.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Mosaicity.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Nickel.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Nucleation.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Obsidian.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Paracrystalline.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Phase_(matter).
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Plasticity_(physics).
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Polycrystalline_silicon.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Precipitation_(chemistry).
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Scanning_electron_microscope.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Scherrer_equation.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Single_crystal.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Strength_of_materials.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Sulfur.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Superalloy.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Supercooling.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Superheating.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Surface_energy.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Texture_(crystalline).
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Toughness.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Transgranular_fracture.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Turbojet.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink Volcano.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink X-ray_crystallography.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink File:Bronze_bell_with_visible_material_structure.jpg.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink File:Compilation_of_polycrystalline_structures_composed_of_crystallites.jpg.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLink File:Crystalline_polycrystalline_amorphous.svg.
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLinkText "Crystallite".
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLinkText "Grain boundary".
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLinkText "crystallite".
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLinkText "crystallites".
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLinkText "grain boundaries".
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLinkText "grain size".
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLinkText "grain structure".
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLinkText "grain".
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLinkText "grains".
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLinkText "metal flake effect".
- Crystallite wikiPageWikiLinkText "microcrystalline".
- Crystallite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_journal.
- Crystallite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Div_col.
- Crystallite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Div_col_end.
- Crystallite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Main.
- Crystallite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Crystallite wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Sync.
- Crystallite subject Category:Crystals.
- Crystallite subject Category:Metallurgy.
- Crystallite hypernym Solids.
- Crystallite type Redirect.
- Crystallite comment "Polycrystalline or multicrystalline materials, or polycrystals are solids that are composed of many crystallites of varying size and orientation. Crystallites are also referred to as grains. They are small or even microscopic crystals and form during the cooling of many materials. Their orientation can be random with no preferred direction, called random texture, or directed, possibly due to growth and processing conditions. Fiber texture is an example of the latter.".
- Crystallite label "Crystallite".
- Crystallite sameAs Q899604.
- Crystallite sameAs Gra_(mineral).
- Crystallite sameAs Kristallit.
- Crystallite sameAs Grano_(mineral).
- Crystallite sameAs کریستالیت.
- Crystallite sameAs Cristallite.
- Crystallite sameAs Kristalno_zrno.
- Crystallite sameAs Cristallite.
- Crystallite sameAs Kristalliet.
- Crystallite sameAs Krystalit.