order–disorder transition 

https://doi.org/10.1351/goldbook.O04321
A transition in which the degree of order of the system changes. Three principal types of disordering transitions may be distinguished: (i) positional disordering in a solid, (ii) orientational disordering which may be static or dynamic and (iii) disordering associated with electronic and nuclear spin states. Examples:
  1. The transition of LiFeO2, with a tetragonal @U06562@, in which the Li+ and Fe3+ cations are perfectly ordered on crystallographically non-equivalent octahedral sites to cubic LiFeO2 in which the Li+ and Fe3+ cations are distributed randomly over all the octahedral sites.
  2. The transition of orthorhombic KCN to cubic KCN in which the CN ions become oriented in any of the eight directions.
  3. A @S06137@
Source:
PAC, 1994, 66, 577. (Definitions of terms relating to phase transitions of the solid state (IUPAC Recommendations 1994)) on page 587 [Terms] [Paper]