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Bernal's road to random packing and the structure of liquids
2013
Philosophical Magazine
Until the 1960s, liquids were generally regarded as either dense gases or disordered solids, and theoretical attempts at understanding their structures and properties were largely based on those concepts. Bernal, himself a crystallographer, was unhappy with either approach, preferring to regard simple liquids as 'homogeneous, coherent and essentially irregular assemblages of molecules containing no crystalline regions'. He set about realizing this conceptual model through a detailed examination
doi:10.1080/14786435.2013.770179
fatcat:25wb6cvb7jgcxc2pp4zodfbyxq