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Crystal Structure

The document discusses crystal structures and lattices. It defines crystalline and amorphous solids, and describes the periodic arrangement of atoms in crystalline structures. It also defines key concepts like unit cells, Bravais lattices, Miller indices, coordination number, atomic packing factor, and close-packed crystal structures. Common crystal structures like FCC, BCC, and HCP are described in terms of their unit cells and atomic arrangements.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
86 views

Crystal Structure

The document discusses crystal structures and lattices. It defines crystalline and amorphous solids, and describes the periodic arrangement of atoms in crystalline structures. It also defines key concepts like unit cells, Bravais lattices, Miller indices, coordination number, atomic packing factor, and close-packed crystal structures. Common crystal structures like FCC, BCC, and HCP are described in terms of their unit cells and atomic arrangements.

Uploaded by

raj kumar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CL 404 : Material

Science

2. Crystal Structure
Atomic arrangement

Solid : Crystalline and amorphous

Crystalline: Periodic arrangement of atoms

Amorphous: random arrangement of atoms

2
Space lattice
 An infinite array of points in 3-d space that every point has identical surroundings
 Periodicity would be different in different directions
 To understand the location /arrangement of of lattice points, we need translation from
one point to another
 To define translation in 3-d space, we need three non coplanar vectors

3
Space lattice
 Unit cell to represent the infinite space lattice – Bravais space lattices

 Unit cell – maximum possible symmetry with smallest size

 14 possible space lattices (or unit cells) under 7 crystal system

 Symmetries
 Translation
 Rotation
 Reflection

4
Space lattice
 Arrangement of lattice points in a unit cell
 Simple
 Body centered
 Face centered
 Base centered/End centered
 Hexagonal

5
Crystal System

6
Why we don’t have FC
tetragonal?

7
Crystal System

8
Crystal System

9
Crystal structure
 One atom / two or more atoms at a given lattice
point
 Ex: one – Cu, Fe
 Multiple: α Mg – 29
 β Mg – 20
 Polymer- in thousands
 One atom –simple
 Multiple atoms – Define the following things
 No. of atoms and their kind
 Internuclear spacing
 Orientation in space

10
Miller indices
 Position coordinates: Position of any point in a
unit cell
 Origin
 Axes
 Direction
 Two Ways
 Shown by arrow which has head and tail
 Origin – could be chosen different for the same
crystal to understand different problems/directions
 Axes and their sense once chosen, cannot be
changed (we loose directional relationships)
11
Miller indices
 Direction
 Let the tail coincide with the origin by shifiting
the origin
 Determine position corordiantes of arrow head
 Reduce them to smallest integers in the same
proportion
 Enclose in square brackets
 Unknown indices : [u v w]

12
Miller indices
 Direction
 Determine position coordinates of arrow head and
tail. Subtract the coordinates (Head – tail)
 Reduce them to smallest integers in the same
proportion ; Enclose in square brackets
 Family of directions
 A direction physically identical to another direction
[not necessary parallel]
 Solid characteristics different in different direction
 All the members in the family have same property

13
Miller indices
 Hexagonal system
 Need fourth indices
 [ u’ v’ w’] [ u v t w]

 u=1/3(2u’ – v’)
 V=1/3(2v’-u’)
 t=(u+v)
 w=w’

14
Miller indices
 Planes
 Indicated by (h k l)
 Reciprocal of intercepts of the plane on the
three axes (to avoid infinity)
 Clear fractions
 Reduce to lowest terms and enclose in ()

15
Interplanar spacing
 The distance between planes dhkl

 System having orthogonal set of axes

 1/d2 = h2/a2 + k2/b2 + l2/c2

16
Coordination number
 Number of nearest neighbor to a particular atom in the crystal

 FCC : 12

 BCC : 8

 HCP : 12

17
Atomic packing factor
(APF)
 APF = volume of atoms/volume of unit cell

 FCC : 0.74

 BCC : 0. 68

 HCP : 0.74

18
Linear and Planar density
 Linear density =

number of atoms centred on direction vector


length of direction vector

19
Linear and Planar density
 Planar density =

number of atoms centred on a plane


area of plane

20
Density Computations

nA

VC N A
Where
n = no. of atoms associated with each unit cell
A =atomic weight
Vc =volume of unit cell
NA = Avogadro’s number

21
Close packed crystal
structure
 FCC and Hexagonal crystal structure –
high packing factor (0.74)

 These can be described in terms of close


packed planes of atoms
 FCC: {111}
 HCP: {0001}

22
Close packed crystal
structure
Void
Vertex up – B
Vertex down - C

HCP 23
FCC

24
Crystal structure
 Allotropy – Elemental solids have more
than one structure
 Fe: BCC at room temp. ; FCC at 912°C
 Tin: BC tetragonal at room temp; diamond
cubic crystal structure at 13.2 °C
 Property change during transformation

25
Crystal Structure
 Single crystals and polycrystalline

 Isotropic, anisotropy
26

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