Yes.
some examples are wax, paraffin, polystyrene, etc. in case u didnt know, an amorphous solid is one that has particles not arranged in a particular order, or has non chrystalline characteristics. There are more everyday examples like glass, rubber, and basic plastics, if any of that helps. Dont forget wood.
wood, rubber, plastic, cloth, and glass
Rubber.
Examples of insulators include plastics, Styrofoam, paper, rubber, glass and dry air.
Glass is made from sand and something else. Rubber I think comes from the rubber tree
Rubber and glass which become softer as they are heated are examples of crystalline solids
yes
some examples are wax, paraffin, polystyrene, etc. in case u didnt know, an amorphous solid is one that has particles not arranged in a particular order, or has non chrystalline characteristics. There are more everyday examples like glass, rubber, and basic plastics, if any of that helps. Dont forget wood.
They are all solids.
it is false because yea
Glass is an amorphous solid.
Crystalline Solids.Solids can be crystalline or amorphous.* Crystalline solid is a solid with a regular arrangement of its components.Some examples are diamond, silica, and graphite. * Amorphous solid is a solid with considerable disorder in its structure, as in common glass or rubber.
Glass as a solid is acturally a 'super-cooled liquid'. If left for many years the glass will appear to go cloudy, light does not trasnmit . This is the glass forming a crystalline solid. Glass is classified as a super-cooled liquid becasue it is a liquid below its melting point, but has not formed crystals, to become solid. NB Under certain weather conditions, water can become super-cooled. That is it is below its freezing point but still remains a liquid.
Crystalline solids exhibit cleavage: that is, when you break them, the nature of the break indicates the crystal structure. Thus, grinding a crystal of NaCl (which is cubic) inevitably produces small cubes of NaCl. Noncrystalline solids such as glass break into randomly-shaped pieces. Noncrystalline solids such as glass soften as the temperature increases and have no sharply defined melting point. On the other hand, quartz, which has the same chemical composition as glass but is crystalline, melts sharply at around 1650 degrees Celsius.
Amorphous solids include plastics, rubber, and glass
Glass is an amorphous substance. Solids can be crystalline or amorphous, so it depends to which type of solid we are comparing glass with.
quartz