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- Dislocation abstract "In materials science, a dislocation is a crystallographic defect, or irregularity, within a crystal structure. The presence of dislocations strongly influences many of the properties of materials. The theory describing the elastic fields of the defects was originally developed by Vito Volterra in 1907, but the term 'dislocation' to refer to a defect on the atomic scale was coined by G. I. Taylor in 1934. Some types of dislocations can be visualized as being caused by the termination of a plane of atoms in the middle of a crystal. In such a case, the surrounding planes are not straight, but instead they bend around the edge of the terminating plane so that the crystal structure is perfectly ordered on either side. The analogy with a stack of paper is apt: if half a piece of paper is inserted in a stack of paper, the defect in the stack is only noticeable at the edge of the half sheet.There are two primary types: edge dislocations and screw dislocations. Mixed dislocations are intermediate between these.Mathematically, dislocations are a type of topological defect, sometimes called a soliton. The mathematical theory explains why dislocations behave as stable particles: they can be moved around, but they maintain their identity as they move. Two dislocations of opposite orientation, when brought together, can cancel each other, but a single dislocation typically cannot "disappear" on its own.".
- Dislocation thumbnail Edge_dislocation.svg?width=300.
- Dislocation wikiPageExternalLink somigliana_-_distortions.pdf.
- Dislocation wikiPageExternalLink volterra_-_equilibrium_of_multiply_connected_bodies.pdf.
- Dislocation wikiPageExternalLink dislocations.
- Dislocation wikiPageExternalLink STM_Gallery.
- Dislocation wikiPageExternalLink contents2.html.
- Dislocation wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Dislocation wikiPageID "795334".
- Dislocation wikiPageRevisionID "602830665".
- Dislocation hasPhotoCollection Dislocation.
- Dislocation subject Category:Crystallographic_defects.
- Dislocation comment "In materials science, a dislocation is a crystallographic defect, or irregularity, within a crystal structure. The presence of dislocations strongly influences many of the properties of materials. The theory describing the elastic fields of the defects was originally developed by Vito Volterra in 1907, but the term 'dislocation' to refer to a defect on the atomic scale was coined by G. I. Taylor in 1934.".
- Dislocation label "Deslocamento (defeito cristalino)".
- Dislocation label "Dislocación (defecto cristalino)".
- Dislocation label "Dislocatie".
- Dislocation label "Dislocation".
- Dislocation label "Dislocation".
- Dislocation label "Dislocazione".
- Dislocation label "Dyslokacja (krystalografia)".
- Dislocation label "Versetzung (Materialwissenschaft)".
- Dislocation label "Дислокация (кристаллография)".
- Dislocation label "位错".
- Dislocation label "転位".
- Dislocation sameAs Versetzung_(Materialwissenschaft).
- Dislocation sameAs Dislocación_(defecto_cristalino).
- Dislocation sameAs Dislocation.
- Dislocation sameAs Dislokasi.
- Dislocation sameAs Dislocazione.
- Dislocation sameAs 転位.
- Dislocation sameAs Dislocatie.
- Dislocation sameAs Dyslokacja_(krystalografia).
- Dislocation sameAs Deslocamento_(defeito_cristalino).
- Dislocation sameAs m.03cp91.
- Dislocation sameAs Mx4rwCAloJwpEbGdrcN5Y29ycA.
- Dislocation sameAs Q737571.
- Dislocation sameAs Q737571.
- Dislocation wasDerivedFrom Dislocation?oldid=602830665.
- Dislocation depiction Edge_dislocation.svg.
- Dislocation isPrimaryTopicOf Dislocation.