Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Crystallography three dimensional lattice points

From crystallography, we obtain an image of the electron clouds that surround the molecules in the average unit cell in the crystal. We hope this image will allow us to locate all atoms in the unit cell. The location of an atom is usually given by a set of three-dimensional Cartesian coordinates, x, y, and z. One of the vertices (a lattice point or any other convenient point) is used as the origin of the unit cell s coordinate system and is assigned the coordinates x = 0, y = 0, and z = 0, usually written (0,0,0). See Fig. 2.4. [Pg.9]

Quasicrystals are solid materials exhibiting diffraction patterns with apparently sharp spots containing symmetry axes such as fivefold or eightfold axes, which are incompatible with the three-dimensional periodicity associated with crystal lattices. Many such materials are aluminum alloys, which exhibit diffraction patterns with fivefold symmetry axes such materials are called icosahedral quasicrystals. " Such quasicrystals " may be defined to have delta functions in their Fourier transforms, but their local point symmetries are incompatible with the periodic order of traditional crystallography. Structures with fivefold symmetry exhibit quasiperiodicity in two dimensions and periodicity in the third. Quasicrystals are thus seen to exhibit a lower order than in true crystals but a higher order than truly amorphous materials. [Pg.4003]

The concept of defects came about from crystallography. Defects are dismptions of ideal crystal lattice such as vacancies (point defects) or dislocations (linear defects). In numerous liquid crystalline phases, there is variety of defects and many of them are not observed in the solid crystals. A study of defects in liquid crystals is very important from both the academic and practical points of view [7,8]. Defects in liquid crystals are very useful for (i) identification of different phases by microscopic observation of the characteristic defects (ii) study of the elastic properties by observation of defect interactions (iii) understanding of the three-dimensional periodic structures (e.g., the blue phase in cholesterics) using a new concept of lattices of defects (iv) modelling of fundamental physical phenomena such as magnetic monopoles, interaction of quarks, etc. In the optical technology, defects usually play the detrimental role examples are defect walls in the twist nematic cells, shock instability in ferroelectric smectics, Grandjean disclinations in cholesteric cells used in dye microlasers, etc. However, more recently, defect structures find their applications in three-dimensional photonic crystals (e.g. blue phases), the bistable displays and smart memory cards. [Pg.209]


See other pages where Crystallography three dimensional lattice points is mentioned: [Pg.186]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.435]    [Pg.1101]    [Pg.4003]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.234]    [Pg.1100]    [Pg.4002]    [Pg.402]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.240]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.520]    [Pg.14]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 ]




SEARCH



Lattice points

Lattice three-dimensional

Lattices lattice points

Lattices, crystallography

Three point

© 2024 chempedia.info