|
|
Line 130: |
Line 130: |
| & = \begin{bmatrix} \frac{2 \pi h}{a} \\ \frac{2 \pi k}{b} \\ \frac{2 \pi l}{c} \end{bmatrix} | | & = \begin{bmatrix} \frac{2 \pi h}{a} \\ \frac{2 \pi k}{b} \\ \frac{2 \pi l}{c} \end{bmatrix} |
| \end{alignat} | | \end{alignat} |
| + | </math> |
| + | And: |
| + | :<math> |
| + | q_{hkl} = 2\pi \sqrt{ \left( \frac{h}{a} \right)^2 + \left( \frac{k}{b} \right)^2 + \left( \frac{l}{c} \right)^2 } |
| </math> | | </math> |
| | | |
Revision as of 10:23, 18 June 2014
Example of the
BCC unit cell.
The unit cell is the basic building block of a crystal lattice (whether an atomic crystal or a nanoscale superlattice). Crystalline materials have a periodic structure, with the unit cell being the minimal volume necessary to fully describe the repeating structure. There are a finite number of possible symmetries for the repeating unit cell.
A unit cell can be defined by three vectors that lie along the edges of the enclosing parallelepped. We denote the vectors as , , and ; alternately the unit cell can be described by the lengths of these vectors (, , ), and the angles between them:
- , the angle between and
- , the angle between and
- , the angle between and
Mathematical description
Vectors
Relations
Volume
If a, b, and c are the parallelepiped edge lengths, and α, β, and γ are the internal angles between the edges, the volume is
The volume of a unit cell with all edge-length equal to unity is:
Angles
- is the angle between and
- is the angle between and
- is the angle between and
Unit cell definition using parallelepiped with lengths
a,
b,
c and angles between the sides given by α,β,γ (from Wikipedia
fractional coordinates).
Reciprocal vectors
The repeating structure of a unit cell creates peaks in reciprocal space. In particular, we observe maxima (constructive interference) when:
Where , , and are integers. We define reciprocal-space vectors:
And we can then express the momentum transfer () in terms of these reciprocal vectors:
Combining with the three Laue equations yields:
Where is a vector that defines the position of Bragg reflection for the reciprocal-lattice.
Examples
Cubic
Since , , and:
And in reciprocal-space:
So:
And:
Hexagonal
Since and , , and:
And in reciprocal-space:
So: