TLP Library
Teaching and learning packages (TLPs) are self-contained, interactive resources, each focusing on one area of Materials Science.
- Search for a TLP Hide description Show description
-
- + Filter by tag
-
- alloys (9)
- atomic-scale structure (18)
- ceramics (3)
- chemistry (5)
- composites (3)
- corrosion (2)
- crystallinity (5)
- crystallography (7)
- diffraction (6)
- diffusion (6)
- elastic deformation (7)
- electronic properties (8)
- energy (3)
- experiment (10)
- failure (2)
- functional materials (8)
- fundamentals (5)
- kinetics (5)
- magnetism (2)
- manufacturing (4)
- mechanical properties (17)
- metals (15)
- microscopy (8)
- microstructure (6)
- natural materials (5)
- phase transformations (7)
- plastic deformation (6)
- polymers (8)
- Raman spectroscopy (1)
- steel (3)
- tensors (3)
- thermal properties (3)
- thermodynamics (7)
- thin films (2)
- Currently showing
-
5 TLPs
having the following tags:
- optical properties x
It is common in basic analysis to treat bulk materials as isotropic - their properties are independent of the direction in which they are measured. However the atomic scale structure can result in properties that vary with direction. This teaching and learning package (TLP) looks into typical examples of such anisotropy and gives a brief mathematical look into modelling the behaviour.
This teaching and learning package provides an introduction to crystalline, polycrystalline and amorphous solids, and how the atomic-level structure has radical consequences for some of the properties of the material. It introduces the use of polarised light to examine the optical properties of materials, and shows how a variety of simple models can be used to visualise important features of the microstructure of materials.
An understanding of polymer crystallinity is important because the mechanical properties of crystalline polymers are different from those of amorphous polymers. Polymer crystals are much stiffer and stronger than amorphous regions of polymer.
This Teaching and Learning Package provides an introduction to liquid crystals, their physical properties and their modern-day applications.
This tutorial is based on lab work within the Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy at the University of Cambridge. The tutorial provides an introduction to the topic of photoelasticity and preparation for lab work. Photographs illustrate many features of birefringence in polymers under polarised light.

© 2004-2013 University of Cambridge.