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====Complex metallic alloys==== {{Main|Complex metallic alloy}} Complex metallic alloys (CMAs) are intermetallic compounds characterized by large unit cells comprising some tens up to thousands of atoms; the presence of well-defined clusters of atoms (frequently with icosahedral symmetry); and partial disorder within their crystalline lattices. They are composed of two or more metallic elements, sometimes with metalloids or [[chalcogenides]] added. They include, for example, NaCd2, with 348 sodium atoms and 768 cadmium atoms in the unit cell. [[Linus Pauling]] attempted to describe the structure of NaCd<sub>2</sub> in 1923, but did not succeed until 1955. At first called "giant unit cell crystals", interest in CMAs, as they came to be called, did not pick up until 2002, with the publication of a paper called "Structurally Complex Alloy Phases", given at the ''8th International Conference on Quasicrystals.'' Potential applications of CMAs include as heat insulation; solar heating; magnetic refrigerators; using waste heat to generate electricity; and coatings for turbine blades in military engines.
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