What Happens to Atoms When You Tear Paper?

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SUMMARY

When tearing paper, the process involves breaking the connections between individual cellulose molecules rather than altering the atoms themselves. The hardness of materials is determined by the arrangement and bonding of atoms and molecules, with stronger bonds in crystalline structures providing greater resistance to deformation. Forces such as van der Waals attractions, polar bonding, and covalent networks play crucial roles in the properties of materials. Understanding these concepts is essential for grasping the mechanics of material strength and behavior.

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  • Understanding of cellulose molecular structure
  • Knowledge of atomic bonding types (covalent, polar, van der Waals)
  • Familiarity with crystalline lattice structures
  • Basic principles of material science
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  • Research the molecular structure of cellulose and its properties
  • Study different types of atomic bonding and their effects on material hardness
  • Explore the concept of crystalline lattices in materials
  • Investigate the role of intermolecular forces in material science
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Material scientists, chemists, and anyone interested in the physical properties of materials and their atomic structures.

physikamateur
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I know this might sound silly, but I always wonder what happens when you say, tear a paper. Do I actually rip the atoms of the paper ? If so wouldn't nuclear forces be rather weak ? The question also reminds me of hardness. What makes an object hard ? is it the arrangement of atoms ? or to be specific, the number of electrons which holds the atoms together ?

Sorry for the multiple-question post. I had a burst stream of consciousness.

Thank you.

Regards,
Alvin.
 
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Paper is made up many interwoven 'fibers' of cellulose 'pulp'. Kind of like a t-shirt (but made of cellulose fibers).

The cellulose fibers are just long strings of molecules. When you rip paper, it's a mix of breaking the connections between the individual molecules and unraveling them at the same time.

You do not alter the atoms, you don't even alter the molecules.


What makes objects hard depends on how the atoms/molecules of a thing bind together. Some bind strongly and in crystalline lattices that support allot of force before being bent/broken. It all depends on how the atoms/molecules hook up and in what shape.
 
James Leighe said:
Paper is made up many interwoven 'fibers' of cellulose 'pulp'. Kind of like a t-shirt (but made of cellulose fibers).

The cellulose fibers are just long strings of molecules. When you rip paper, it's a mix of breaking the connections between the individual molecules and unraveling them at the same time.

You do not alter the atoms, you don't even alter the molecules.


What makes objects hard depends on how the atoms/molecules of a thing bind together. Some bind strongly and in crystalline lattices that support allot of force before being bent/broken. It all depends on how the atoms/molecules hook up and in what shape.



Not exactly, it does depend on packing or how well the molecules but most importantly what forces between molecules for example the force that holds molecules of hydrogen together are the weak van der walls attractions where you have unsymetric orbit of electrons causing one side of the molecule to be slightly negative and thus the other slightly positive and then these sides can attract to other molecules. Or you can have polar bonding where due to electro negativitys of atoms causing constant negative and positive sides of a molecule due to the fact that some atoms grab more electrons than others. Then you have the hydrogen bond witch is just a very strong polar bond and the strongest is covalent network like in dimond where their is just strong covalent bonding between atoms and it reapeats so dimond is just like one big molecule
 

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