Binding Diffusion in Solid State: The Four Fundamental Forces Gravity
Binding Diffusion in Solid State: The Four Fundamental Forces Gravity
Binding Diffusion in Solid State: The Four Fundamental Forces Gravity
In physics, the systems that interact with each other are known as interconnected systems.
In classical mechanics, this connection is the connection of two oscillating systems to
each other in some way, such as two pendulums connected by a spring. Communication
affects the oscillation pattern of both systems. In particle physics, two particles are said
to be interconnected if they are connected to each other by one of the four fundamental
forces.
Electromagnetic forces
These forces play essential roles in chemical and biological reactions, as their range is
not final and has no effect in the astronomical field, as the content of cosmic materials is
unified and electrically neutral and falls within the domain of the weak nuclear forces
nuclear power
They are attractive forces with a very short range, as the length of their effects does not
exceed the core or outside the nucleus.
- The atoms, ions or molecules in crystalline steel are arranged in a definite, always
repeating order.
- Binding forces may arise from the attraction of molecules, as in solid carbon
dioxide CO2 (dry ice).
- The term (Amorphy) has been given to the material that does not have a natural geometric
shape or an ordered internal structure, and its surfaces do not have specific, repetitive faces, as is
the case in a crystalline substance.
-The particles of amorphous matter are arranged in a random order, as is the case in liquids.
Therefore, they are considered liquids in a range of temperatures, unlike crystalline materials that
melt at a constant temperature
Types of crystalline solids according to the type of bonding between their
molecules
Crystalline solids are divided into three types according to the forces that
bind their molecules
The points of the crystal lattice in this type of crystal occupy molecules
that hold together and bond with each other with physical bonds due to
the attraction between the dipole molecules or as a result of the presence
of hydrogen bonds or the London (Van Dervals) forces (which are the
same forces that exist between gases), and therefore the crystals
electrically neutral.
These electrically neutral crystals are called van der Waals crystals,
because the reason for their cohesion is van der Waals forces, while the
atoms within the same molecules are linked by covalent bonds such as
(solid carbon dioxide crystal)
The three types of bonds that can exist between the molecules of a molecular crystal are:
- Ionic crystals are the ones that consist of the arrangement of positive
ions (cations) and negative ions (anions) (ions of opposite charge) in one
of the known crystal forms, and the arrangement is through the
attraction between negative and positive ions (electrostatic attraction).
The forces that bind the molecules of this type of crystal are strong ionic
bonds, which are much stronger than the other intermolecular forces,
such as the bonding between sodium chloride molecules.
Third: Atomic crystals