A. Lattice, Basis, and The Unit Cell B. Common Crystal Structures C. Miller Indices For Crystal Directions and Planes D. The Reciprocal Lattice
A. Lattice, Basis, and The Unit Cell B. Common Crystal Structures C. Miller Indices For Crystal Directions and Planes D. The Reciprocal Lattice
Crystal Structure
A. Lattice, Basis, and the Unit Cell
B. Common Crystal Structures
C. Miller Indices for Crystal Directions and
Planes
D. The Reciprocal Lattice
A. Lattice, Basis, and Unit Cell
An ideal crystalline solid is an infinite repetition of identical
structural units in space. The repeated unit may be a single atom
or a group of atoms.
An important concept:
= +
lattice: a periodic array of points in space. The environment
surrounding each lattice point is identical.
a b
In our 2-D lattice: a 2b
b
a
B. Common Crystal Structures
2-D only 5 distinct point lattices that can fill all space
(a) NaCl
(b) CsCl
(c) fluorite
(d) perovskite
hexagonal close
packed (Be, Mg, Zn)
diamond structure
(C, Si, Ge)
Analysis of Common Crystal Structures
1. NaCl structure (many ionic solids)
z z=3
1. Determine intercepts (x, y, z)
of the plane with the coordinate y=2
axes y
x=1
x
C. Miller Indices,cont’d.
2. Express the intercepts as multiples of the base vectors of the lattice
In this example, let’s assume that the lattice is given by: a 1iˆ b 1 ˆj c 3kˆ
x 1 y 2 z 3
Then the intercept ratios become: 1 2 1
a 1 b 1 c 3
a 1 b 1 c 1
3. Form reciprocals: 1 1
x 1 y 2 z 1
4. Multiply through by the factor that allows you to express these indices as
the lowest triplet of integers:
x a
[001]
Crystal directions are z
specified [hkl] as the
coordinates of the lattice [010]
point closest to the origin y
along the desired direction:
x
Note: [hkl] = a specific direction; [00 1 ]
[100]
<hkl> = a family of symmetry-
equivalent directions
y
n̂hkl
x d hkl
This seems like an unnecessary abstraction. What is the payoff for defining such
a reciprocal lattice?
Problems worthy
of attack
Prove their worth
by hitting back
--Piet Hein