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Structure of Solids Objectives By the end of this section you should be able to: Calculate atomic packing factors (HW) Compare bcc, fcc and hcp crystal.

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Presentation on theme: "Structure of Solids Objectives By the end of this section you should be able to: Calculate atomic packing factors (HW) Compare bcc, fcc and hcp crystal."— Presentation transcript:

1 Structure of Solids Objectives By the end of this section you should be able to: Calculate atomic packing factors (HW) Compare bcc, fcc and hcp crystal structures Determine/understand coordination numbers Identify primitive unit cell lattice parameters Be able to build the Wigner-Seitz cell for a lattice

2 Solid Models: Close-Packed Spheres Many atoms or ions forming solids have spherical symmetry (e.g. noble gases and simple metals) Considering the atoms or ions as solid spheres we can imagine crystals as closely packed spheres How can we pack them?

3 APF for the simple cubic structure = 0.52 ATOMIC PACKING FACTOR (APF) contains 8 x 1/8 = 1atom/unit cell Lattice constant close-packed directions a R=0.5a

4 Simple cubic A simple cubic structure is not efficient at packing spheres (atoms occupy only 52% of the total volume). Marbles will not resemble. Only two elements crystallize in the simple cubic structure (F and O).

5 Another Reason Simple Cubic Structure is Rare Groups: Using the spheres (like atoms) and magnetic sticks (like bonds between atoms), create a simple cubic lattice. How does this compare to a triangular pyramid structure?

6  Vertex(corner) atom shared by 8 cells  1 / 8 atom per cell  Edge atom shared by 4 cells  1 / 4 atom per cell  Face atom shared by 2 cells  1 / 2 atom per cell  Body unique to 1 cell  1 atom per cell Three Cubic Unit Cell Types in 3D

7 What is the close packed direction? --Note: All atoms are identical; the center atom is shaded differently only for ease of viewing. BODY CENTERED CUBIC STRUCTURE (BCC) How would we calculate the atomic packing factor?

8 Better packing than SC In the body-centred cubic (bcc) structure 68% of the total volume is occupied. Next-nearest neighbors relatively close by – make structure stable in some instances. Examples: Alkali metals, Ba, V, Nb, Ta, W, Mo, Cr, Fe Is this cube a primitive lattice? No. The bcc structure is a Bravais lattice but the edges of the cube are not the primitive lattice vectors. Not smallest Vol.

9 --Note: All atoms are identical; the face-centered atoms are shaded differently only for ease of viewing. FACE CENTERED CUBIC STRUCTURE (FCC) What is the close packed direction? What are the lattice directions of the primitive unit cell? APF = 0.74

10 Simple Crystal FCC Another view

11 Homework 4.1 A. simple cubic with additional points in the horizontal faces C. simple cubic with additional points at the midpoints of lines joining nearest neighbors Note: green and orange are same atoms (only different colors for clarity) What does it mean to ask if it’s a primitive Bravais lattice? One lattice point (not atom) per unit cell

12 Groups: Fill in this Table for Cubic Structures SCBCCFCC Volume of conventional cella3a3 a3a3 a3a3 # of atoms per cubic cell124 Volume, primitive cella3a3 ½ a 3 ¼ a 3 # of nearest neighbors6812 Nearest-neighbor distancea ½ a  3a/  2 # of second neighbors1266 Second neighbor distance a2a2 aa

13 Wigner-Seitz Method for Defining a Primitive Unit Cell (points are closest to each other) 1. Pick a center atom (origin) within the lattice 2. Draw perp. bisector to all neighbors of reciprocal lattice 3. Draw smallest polyhedron enclosed by bisectors Always a hexagon in 2D, unless the lattice is rectangular.

14 Wigner-Seitz for BCC & FCC

15 Close packed crystals A plane B plane C plane A plane …ABCABCABC… packing [Face Centered Cubic (FCC)] …ABABAB… packing [Hexagonal Close Packing (HCP)]

16 Close-packed structures: fcc and hcp hcp ABABAB... fcc ABCABCABC... If time allows: In groups, build these two differing crystal structures.

17 ABAB... Stacking Sequence APF = 0.74 (same as fcc) What is the packing direction? 3D Projection 2D Projection HEXAGONAL CLOSE-PACKED STRUCTURE (HCP) For ideal packing, c/a ratio of 1.633 However, in most metals, ratio deviates from this value

18 Lattice Planes and Miller Indices Hexagonal structure: a-b plane (2D hexagon) can be defined by 3 vectors in plane ( hkl ) 3D structure can be defined by 4 miller indices ( h k l m ) Third miller index not independent: h + k = -l Have more on HCP planes in the Additional Materials tab of website e h k l m

19 The Crystal Lattice – 3D There are 7 (instead of 5) possibilities to define basis vectors Packing isn’t the only consideration when building a lattice.

20 Other non close-packed structures In covalently bonded materials, bond direction is more important than packing diamond (only 34 % packing) graphite

21 Simple Crystal Structures Diamond Crystal class T d (tetrahedral) - Each atom has 4 nearest- neighbors (nn). Can be interpreted as two combined fcc structures – One atom at origin – Other atom displaced along diagonal (¼, ¼, ¼) Includes C, Si, Ge,  -Sn

22 Diamond & Zincblende Crystal Structure Basis set: 2 atoms. Lattice  face centered cubic (fcc). The fcc primitive lattice is generated by r = n 1 a 1 +n 2 a 2 +n 3 a 3 with lattice vectors: a 1 = a(0,1,0)/2, a 2 = a(1,0,1)/2, a 3 = a(1,1,0)/2 NOTE: The a i ’s are NOT mutually orthogonal! Diamond: 2 identical atoms in basis (e.g. 2 C) fcc lattice Zincblende: 2 different atoms in basis and fcc lattice For FCC 2 atom ABCABC stacking, it is called zinc blende

23 8 12 Coordination number 6 Primitive cubicBody centered cubicFace centered cubic

24 24 Close-packed structures: fcc and hcp hcp ABABAB... fcc ABCABCABC...

25 25 Close-packed structures: fcc and hcp hcp ABABAB... fcc ABCABCABC...

26 26 Close-packed structures: fcc and hcp hcp ABABAB... fcc ABCABCABC...

27 27 Close-packed structures: fcc and hcp hcp ABABAB... fcc ABCABCABC...

28 Close-packed structures: fcc and hcp hcp ABABAB... fcc ABCABCABC... The face-centred cubic (fcc) and hexagonal close- packed (hcp) structure have the same packing fraction


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