Crystalline materials (mainly
metals and
alloys, but also stoichiometric
salts and other materials) are made up of solid regions of ordered matter (atoms placed in one of a number of ordered formations called
Bravais lattices[?]). These regions are known as crystals. A
perfect crystal is one that contains no point, linear, or planar imperfections. There are a wide variety of
crystallographic defects
The hypothetical concept of a perfect crystal is important in the basic formulation of the laws of thermodynamics.
In crystallography, the phrase 'perfect crystal' can be used to mean "no line or planar defects", as it is difficult to measure small quantities of point defects in an otherwise defect-free crystal.
All Wikipedia text
is available under the
terms of the GNU Free Documentation License