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Crystalline Structure
Two fundamentally different material structures can be distinguished: (1) crystalline and (2) noncrystalline.
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Crystalline Structure
A crystalline structure is one in which the atoms are located at regular and recurring positions in three dimensions. The pattern may be replicated millions of times within a given crystal. The structure can be viewed in the form of a unit cell, which is the basic geometric grouping of atoms that is repeated.
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In metals, three lattice structures are common: (1) body-centered cubic (BCC), (2) face centered cubic (FCC), and (3) hexagonal close-packed (HCP), illustrated in figure (8). Crystal structures for the common metals are presented in table (1).
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Allotropic Note that some metals undergo a change of structure at different temperatures. Iron, for example, is BCC at room temperature; it changes to FCC above 912°C and back to BCC at temperatures above 1400°C. When a metal (or other material) changes structure like this, it is referred to as being allotropic.
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