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Let’s grow a solid

Let’s grow a solid. How solids grow Put your own name here!. A natural object. A man-made object. What is special about a solid?. It keeps its shape . Liquids. Have no shape so atoms can move round freely. When solids get hot they melt to form a liquid

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Let’s grow a solid

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  1. Let’s grow a solid How solids grow Put your own name here!

  2. A natural object A man-made object What is special about a solid? • It keeps its shape.

  3. Liquids • Have no shapeso atoms can move round freely. • When solids get hot they meltto form a liquid - like chocolate on a hot day.

  4. Solids remember how they grew! • We look at 2 ways that solids grow. • and the types of solid formed. • Water can form: • frost and snowflakes – formed out of the air • ice in icicles or on a pond – formed from water

  5. 1. Snowflakes and frost • are very irregular, • have many points or edges, • have lots of space inside them.

  6. 2. Ice in icicles Ice on a pond It is transparent with very flat surfaces

  7. Water from the tap and water from melted ice • Which is which? • Liquids do not remember.

  8. How do solids grow? Why is it interesting and useful to know? • We make modern devices by growing a solid atom-by-atom • to give us the form that we want.

  9. 1

  10. Snowflakes grow from vapour • We have air with very few water molecules in it. • When the water molecule hits a cold surface it will stick just where it lands Molecule – a new word? A molecule of water is the tiniest particle of water that can exist and still be water. Cold surface

  11. A computer can show this • We use a simulation from Hong Kong http://apricot.polyu.edu.hk/~lam/dla/dla.html

  12. http://apricot.ap.polyu.edu.hk/dla/dla.html

  13. Growing a snowflake • 100 molecules 11 000 molecules

  14. 2

  15. Ice from a puddle • Why is it perfectly flat?

  16. Crystals • When solids grow the atoms add on row by row to form a layer. • Then another layer grows on top. • Then another - A tiny natural crystal in a stone

  17. How many layers of atoms in this chunk of quartz crystal? • One layer is very, very thin. • About 10000 layers make the thickness of paper. • The crystal has about 100 million layers of atoms! How big can a crystal grow? See http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8466493.stm

  18. Growing a solid from liquid or a solution • An atom will join the solid only if the conditions are exactly right. • If the solid is near to its melting point the atoms can move around so as to get a more perfect pattern. • We call this annealing.

  19. Growing a solid atom by atom • Send a beam of atoms through a vacuum and on to a flat surface. • Keep the surface hot so that the atoms can move around and find the best place to settle.

  20. What is the arrangement of atoms? • Each atom wants to be close to other atoms. • What pattern do we get? We see lines crystals!

  21. More atoms • Can you see a pattern?

  22. Lines

  23. More lines

  24. - in 3 directions

  25. Bubble rafts show this- We will make some soon.

  26. How to make a bubble raft Add one spoonful of detergent very carefully - stir gently. Put in the yoghurt pot - you will get a stream of bubbles. Bowl of water The yoghurt pot is below the water surface and above the bottom of the bowl. Move your hand slowly from side to side to spread the bubbles.

  27. A bubble raft is a ‘solid’ layer on the surface of the water. A bubble raft grown quickly.

  28. What do we see? • The bubbles attract each other. • They all move a little so that a new bubble goes in the best place. • The bubbles are attracted to the edge of the container and to your fingers! • If a bubble bursts or the raft is disturbed it will repair itself – this is called annealing.

  29. A bubble raft grown very slowly • Can you see the rows? University of Cambridge

  30. The bubbles are in rows • In 3 directions

  31. Who are the experts at creating this order? • Bees • honeycomb

  32. A foam dance! What else do we learn ? • Bubbles are made from airand soapy water BUT • They do not look like air, or water. • They do not behave like air, or water.

  33. What is special about bubbles? • The soap films are very thin. • A thin film of water is very different from water in a bucket or glass. • We have a very thin sandwich air- water–air

  34. Now back to solids • All crystalline solids have atoms in layers like lots of bubble rafts. • We can grow crystals from a solution of salt in water. • Special ‘sandwich’ crystals can be grown, which have different atoms in different layers.

  35. Sandwich crystals can now be grown layer by layer • MBE (Molecular Beam Epitaxy) • 1 layer per second • 2,000,000 seconds for 1 mm • = 23 days for 1 mm • These special crystals are used in- • LEDs • and-----

  36. You use manufactured crystals in – Computer ‘chips’ Chips are in: mobile phones games consoles MP3 players-- laptops

  37. What have we learned ? • A solid remembers the way it is formed. • A solid formed from vapour may be like a snowflake. • We get perfect solids from liquids and if the solid is free to readjust, anneal. • We grew a bubble raft on water and watched it anneal. • We saw that soap bubbles look very different from water and air and behave differently too! • We learned that modern devices depend on atomic layer sandwiches.

  38. Scientists do amazing things! There is lots to find out! Keep asking questions!

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