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Crystalline state Symmetry in nature Symmetry in arts and industry

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Presentation on theme: "Crystalline state Symmetry in nature Symmetry in arts and industry"— Presentation transcript:

1 Crystalline state Symmetry in nature Symmetry in arts and industry
Description of symmetry – basic concepts Crystallography of two dimensions Crystallography of three dimensions

2 Symmetry elements in 3D Simple symmetry elements – point operations
Rotation axes 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 Reflection planes m Inversion center – stred súmernosti i, Compound symmetry elements – point operations Rotoinversions – inverzné rotačné osi Rotoreflections – zrkadlové rotačné osi

3 Rotoinversion (= i)

4 Fourfold inversion axis
new symmetry element

5 translation component
Glide planes in 3D Compound symmetry elements – with translations a, b, c a/2, b/2, c/2 n (a ± b)/2, etc. d (a ± b)/4, etc. (a ± b ± c)/4 printed symbol translation component

6 Screw axes – skrutkové rotačné osi
Compound symmetry elements – with translations Screw axes printed symbols graphical symbols

7 Screw axes repetition of points

8 Combination of intersecting axes
- every two rotations around intersecting axes can be replaced by one appropriate rotation the angles and the orientation of the axes are arbitrary strong limitation for crystal structures the rotation angles can acquire only the values 0°, 60°, 90°, 120°, 180° the same holds for the resulting rotation which axis combinations are allowed? there are 35 triplets of axes but only the following combinations are allowed 222, 223, 224, 226, 233, 234

9 Axial combinations Three axes Aα , Bβ and Cγ with rotations α, β and γ, angles between the axes u, v and w u v w axes α β γ w u v 222 180° 90° 223 120° 60° 224 45° 226 30° 233 54°44' 70°32' 234 35°16'

10 Six permissible nontrivial combination of rotations

11 Six crystallographic axial symmetries

12 32 point groups in 3D permissible axes and their combinations
1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 222, 223, 224, 226, 233, 234, combination with mirror planes and inversion center 1

13 32 point groups in 3D

14 Seven crystal systems The presence (or absence) of rotation axes allows to clasify the crystal structures The characteristic symmetry indicates the minimal symmetry that is always present in each crystal system

15 Crystal systems and the point groups
red – possess only rotation axes - enantiomorphic magenta – possess a center of inversion – centrosymmetric bold – referred to as polar

16 Polar groups Those point groups for which every operation leaves more than one common point unmoved are known as the polar point groups. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, m, mm2, 3m, 4mm and 6mm Polar direction – polárny smer Direction which is not symmetry equivalent to its opposite direction. Polar direction can only exist in 21 non-centrosymmetric point groups. 20 of them are piezoelectric point groups – crystals with this symmetry exhibit piezoelectricity. Exception: group 432 – center of symmetry not present, but piezoelectricity cannot occur. Unique direction – jedinečný smer Direction that is just one and that is not repeated by any symmetry operation. All unique direction is a polar direction, but only some polar directions are unique. Unique directions are present only in 8 of 10 polar groups: 2, 3, 4, 6, mm2, 3m, 4mm and 6mm Groups 1 and m are excluded

17 Stereographic projection
How to represent three-dimensional angular relations in plane? Stereographic projection is a quantitative method for presenting three-dimensional orientation relationships between crystallographic planes and directions on a two- dimensional figure.

18 Point groups in stereographic projection
TETRAGONAL SYSTEM

19 Point groups in stereographic projection

20 14 Bravais lattices special centering of hexagonal lattice

21 Hexagonal & rhombohedral indices
ar br cr

22 Cubic & rhombohedral indices
ar br cr

23 Transformation of indices - example
LSMO – space group R-3c (167) hexagonal indexing conversion to pseudo-cubic lattice and indexing a ~ nm hexagonal → rhombohedral rhombohedral → cubic 012 → 020 (if a ~ then 010) 104 → 220

24 Symbols of space groups
Lijk – International notation Schönflies notation point group L = lattice – capital letter for 3D lattice L P – primitive I – body centered C – centered F – face centered R – trigonal ijk = symmetry elements of space group for the different symmetry directions

25 International Tables for Crystallography

26 fractional coordinates –
Wyckoff symbols x, y, z – coordinates of a point expressed in units a, b, c fractional coordinates – frakčné súradnice

27 230 space groups Comprehensive derivation:
M. J. Buerger: Elementary Crystallography, MIT Press, 1978, pp Uneven distribution of crystal structures 70% of elements belong to 4 groups face-centered cubic body-centered cubic hexagonal close-packed diamond cubic 60% of organic crystalline compounds have one of six space groups

28 Examples of structures
fcc – face-centered cubic four points of space lattice/cell 0,0,0; 1/2, 1/2, 0; 0, 1/2, 1/2; 1/2, 0, 1/2 Al, Cu, Ag, Pd, Pt, Ir bcc – body-centered cubic two points of space lattice/cell 0,0,0; 1/2, 1/2, 1/2 Fe, Li, Na, K, Rb, Ba, V, Cr, crystals with the same lattice may have very different structure iron

29 Examples of structures
α-manganese g x = 0.089; z = 0.278 g x = 0.356; z = 0.042 c x = 0.356 important!! 1/2 is not 0.5

30 Examples of structures
hcp – hexagonal close-packed one points of space lattice/cell 0,0,0 two atoms/point 1/3, 2/3, 1/4; /3, 1/3, 3/4 Be, Mg, Co, Zn, Zr, Ru 0, 0, 0; /3, 2/3, 1/2 diamond structure fcc lattice, four points of space lattice/cell two atoms/point 3/8, 3/8, 3/8; 7/8, 3/8, 3/8 0,0,0; 1/4, 1/4, 1/4 C, Si, Ge GaAs, InP different atoms at two positions

31 Examples of structures
barium titanate BaTiO3 lattice? points/cell? motif? primitive one/cell 5 atoms barium oxigen titanium

32 How to use the data? X-ray diffraction identification of phases
lattice parameters, space group position of atoms calculation of theoretical diffraction pattern

33


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