- old final
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old final
- Ch. 16 final ppt
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Ch. 16 final ppt.
- CH. 16 final
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Ch. 16 final
- Exam Coverage and other such things
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You are responsible for Chs. 1 thru 4.
The following
sections are the ones you are responsible for in Ch. 5: Up to, but not
including, section 5.2.3. i.e. up to p. 118 + section 5.8.
Ch. 6: All section except pp. 157-160 and sections 6.3 and 6.4
Ch. 7 All sections except sections 7.2.5 and 7.4 (not included) till end. Chapter 14: All sections
Chapter 15: All sections
Chapter 16: All sections
You will also be responsible for:
Ch. 14: 14.4, 14.6, 14.7, 14.8, 14.9, 14.11 + all worked examples.
Ch. 15: 15.4, 15.7, 15.10, 15.11, 15.14, 15.15 + all worked examples.
Ch. 16: 16.2, 16.5, 16.9, 16.10, 16.18, 16.27 + all worked example
PLEASE
NOTE THAT YOU CAN BRING A 8.5X11 SHEET TO THE EXAM WITH ANYTHING YOU
WANT ON IT FOR THE EXAM. THE EXAM IS CLOSED BOOK AND NOTES. YOU WILL
NEED A PERIODIC TABLE, A CALCULATOR AND A BRAIN... LAST ONE OPTIONAL
;-)
- Ch 15
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ch 15
- Ch. 14 pdf Final
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Ch. 14 final
- Chapter 14 final ppt
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Chapter 14 final ppt
- Ch. 15
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Ch. 15
- Old Exam II
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Here is an old exam. Note also that in the previous exam that I posted before Exam 1, there are a few questions about dielectric properties. Good luck. Cheers. Michel
- Coverage for Exam 2
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The exam is cumulative, but with emphasis on new material. Here are the sections that you have to cover:
Ch. 6: All section except pp. 157-160 and sections 6.3 and 6.4
Ch. 7 All sections except sections 7.2.5 and 7.4 (not included) till end.
Ch. 14: All section up to but not including 14.4.3 till end.
- A Question about defect concentrations
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One of you sent me the following email:
I’m trying to follow your book, to get through these homework
questions, and one problem I’m frequently having is with notation. I
am not certain which notation is used for mole fraction, atom percent,
concentration, or just number when talking about a specific type of
defect in crystals. To compound the matter, we are learning about
these defects in thermo as well, and while they use the Kroger vink
notation as well, I’m having a lot of difficulty following. Can you
consolidate, or simplify this problem for me?
Answer:
It is not that complicated; when you see square brackets that is a mole FRACTION and dimensionless. If you see something like Vo, n or p, WITHOUT brackets then that is usually either per mole or per m3 depending on the problem. When dealing with conductivity then you HAVE to use number of defects per m3. Michel
- Ch. 7 pdf
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Ch. 7 pdf
- Ch. 7 final
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Ch. 7 final
- Here are the teams
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Sean Miller, Russ Marron, Courtney Reid, Barbara Robinson, Eric Brenner
Thao Vi Le, Mike Wang, Sean Garner, Dominic
Di Prato, Schecter, Antonakos, Leithead,
Fahnestock, Tallman, Pugh, Mussey, Chan
McCormic, Pelletier, Snow, Hartshorne
CJ, Sexton, Ismail, Coyle
Eric, Riblett, Jamison, Fallis
Ari, Devillier, Camichael, Coffey
- Problem Set due Thursday 21 Feb.
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Ch. 6: 6.3, 6.4, 6.5, 6.8, 6.9 + all worked examples in section covered.
Ch. 7: 7.1, 7.2, 7.4, 7.5, 7.13 + all worked examples in sections covered.
This is an important quiz and will count for 2 quizzes... Cheers. Michel