3A Crystal Structure
3A Crystal Structure
3A Crystal Structure
ISSUES TO ADDRESS...
Chapter 3 - 1
Basic Concepts:
Chapter 3 - 2
Crystalline material- one in which the atoms
are situated in a repeating or periodic
array over large atomic distances –
i.e., long- range order exists, such that
upon solidification, the atoms will
position themselves in a repetitive three-
dimensional pattern.
Chapter 3 - 3
Materials and Packing
Crystalline materials...
• atoms pack in periodic, 3D arrays
• typical of: -metals
-many ceramics
-some polymers crystalline SiO2
Adapted from Fig. 3.23(a),
Callister & Rethwisch 8e.
Si Oxygen
Noncrystalline materials...
• atoms have no periodic packing
• occurs for: -complex structures
-rapid cooling
"Amorphous" = or Noncrystalline noncrystalline SiO2
Adapted from Fig. 3.23(b),
literally “without form” Callister & Rethwisch 8e.
Chapter 3 - 4
Chapter 3 - 5
Energy and Packing
• Non dense, random packing Energy
typical neighbor
bond length
typical neighbor r
bond energy
typical neighbor
bond length
typical neighbor r
bond energy
Chapter 3 - 9
Definition of terms:
• Unit Cell
-small repeat entities used in describing
crystal structures
- usually parallelepipeds or prisms having
three sets of parallel faces; one is drawn
within the aggregate of spheres
- A unit cell is chosen to represent the
symmetry of the crystal structure
Chapter 3 - 10
• Unit cell is the basic structural unit
defining the crystal structure by virtue of
its geometry and the atoms within.
• We will generally use the unit cell having
the highest level of geometrical
symmetry.
Chapter 3 - 11
Metallic Crystal Structures
• How can we stack metal atoms to minimize
empty space?
2-dimensions
vs.
Chapter 3 - 13
Atomic Radii and Crystal Structures
Chapter 3 - 14
Face-Centered Cubic Crystal Structure
(FCC)
The crystal structure found for many metals has
a unit cell of cubic geometry, with atoms located
at each of the corners and centers of all the cube
faces
-Shows a hard-sphere model
For the FCC unit cell
Chapter 3 - 15
• The atom centers are represented by
small circles to provide a better
perspective on atom positions
Chapter 3 - 16
Chapter 3 - 17
Face Centered Cubic Structure (FCC)
• Atoms touch each other along face diagonals.
--Note: All atoms are identical; the face-centered atoms are shaded
differently only for ease of viewing.
Chapter 3 - 18
• Number of atoms per unit cell, N, can
be computed as:
N = Ni + Nf + NC
2 8
Where Ni = number of interior atoms
Nf = number of face atoms
NC = number of corner atoms
Chapter 3 - 19
• For FCC crystal structure, there are 8
corner atoms (NC = 8), 6 face atoms (Nf =
6), and no interior atoms (Ni = 0).
• Thus,
N=0 + 6 + 8
2 8
= 4 whole atoms may be assigned
to a given unit cell.
Chapter 3 - 20
Two other important characteristics of a crystal structure:
Coordination number
Chapter 3 -
Atomic Packing Factor: FCC
• APF for a face-centered cubic structure = 0.74
maximum achievable APF
Close-packed directions:
Length, a = 2R 2
2a
Unit cell contains:
6 x 1/2 + 8 x 1/8
= 4 atoms/unit cell
a
Adapted from
Fig. 3.1(a),
Callister & atoms volume
Rethwisch 8e. 4 3
unit cell 4 ( 2a/4)
3 atom
APF =
3 volume
a
unit cell
Chapter 3 - 22
FCC Stacking Sequence
• ABCABC... Stacking Sequence
• 2D Projection
B B
C
A
A sites B B B
C C
B sites B B
C sites
A
• FCC Unit Cell B
C
Chapter 3 - 23
Sample Problem:
Calculate the volume of an FCC unit cell in terms
of the atomic radius R.
Given: FCC unit cell Req’d: Vc in terms of a
Soln:
V c = a3 ;
Vc = (2R √2)3 = 16 R3 √2 Ans.
Chapter 3 - 24
Sample Problem:
Show that the atomic packing factor for the FCC crystal
structure is 0.74
Given: FCC unit cell
Req’d: show that APF = 0.74
Sol’n:
APF = VT atoms in a unit cell .
V unit cell
APF = 4(4/3) R3 = .
16 R3 2 32
= 0.74
Chapter 3 - 25
Body Centered Cubic Structure (BCC)
• Another common metallic crystal structure
• Also has a cubic unit cell with atoms located at all
8 corners and a single atom at the cube center
• Center and corner atoms touch one another along
cube diagonals, and relationship of unit cell
length a and atomic radius R
a = 4R
√3
Chapter 3 - 26
Body Centered Cubic Structure (BCC)
• Atoms touch each other along cube diagonals.
--Note: All atoms are identical; the center atom is shaded
differently only for ease of viewing.
2a
Close-packed directions:
Adapted from R length = 4R = 3 a
Fig. 3.2(a), Callister &
Rethwisch 8e.
a
atoms volume
4
unit cell 2 ( 3a/4) 3
3 atom
APF =
3 volume
a
unit cell Chapter 3 - 28
Show for the body centered cubic crystal structure
that the unit cell edge length a and the atomic
radius R are related through a = 4R/3 .
Given: BCC
Req’d: show that a = 4R/3 4R
a2 a
Sol’n:
(4R)2 = a2 + (a2)2
16 R2 = 3 a2
R = a3 or a = 4R
4 3
Chapter 3 -
Simple Cubic Structure (SC)
• Rare due to low packing density (only Po has this structure)
• Close-packed directions are cube edges.
• Coordination # = 6
(# nearest neighbors)
Chapter 3 - 30
Simple Cubic (SC) crystal structure
Chapter 3 - 31
Atomic Packing Factor (APF)
Volume of atoms in unit cell*
APF =
Volume of unit cell
*assume hard spheres
• APF for a simple cubic structure = 0.52
volume
atoms atom
a 4
unit cell 1 (0.5a) 3
3
R=0.5a APF =
a3 volume
close-packed directions
unit cell
contains 8 x 1/8 =
1 atom/unit cell
Adapted from Fig. 3.24,
Callister & Rethwisch 8e. Chapter 3 - 32
Hexagonal Close-Packed Structure
(HCP)
- Consists of 6 atoms that form
regular hexagons and a single
atom in the center
- Another plane provides 3
additional atoms to the unit cell
is situated between the top and
bottom planes.
- Where a and c, respectively are
the short and long unit cell
dimensions
Chapter 3 - 33
Hexagonal Close-Packed Structure
(HCP)
• ABAB... Stacking Sequence
• 3D Projection • 2D Projection
Atoms/ Coordination
Structure a vs R Cell No. APF
SC a = 2R 1 6 0.52
BCC a = 4R/ 3 2 8 0.68
a = 4R/2
FCC a = 2R 2 4 12 0.74
a = 2R,
HCP c = 1.6333a 6 12 0.74
Chapter 3 -
Density Computations
• Theoretical density, ρ = n A
Vc NA
• Where
n = number of atoms associated with each unit cell
A = atomic weight
VC = volume of unit cell
NA = Avogadro’s number (6.022 x 1023 atoms/mol)
Chapter 3 - 36
Theoretical Density,
• Ex: Cr (BCC)
A = 52.00 g/mol
R = 0.125 nm
n = 2 atoms/unit cell
R
Adapted from
a a = 4R/ 3 = 0.2887 nm
Fig. 3.2(a), Callister &
Rethwisch 8e.
atoms
g
unit cell 2 52.00 theoretical = 7.18 g/cm3
mol
= actual = 7.19 g/cm3
a3 6.022 x 1023
volume atoms
unit cell mol Chapter 3 - 37
Copper has an atomic radius of 0.128 nm, an FCC crystal structure
and an atomic weight of 63.5 g/mol. Compute its theoretical
density and compare it with the measured density, 8.94 g/cm3.
162R3NA
Vc NA
= (4atoms/cell)(63.5g/mol)
16x2 x (1.28x10-8 cm)3
x (6.023x1023 atoms/mol)
= 8.887 g/cm3
Chapter 3 - 38
Determine the density of BCC iron, w/c has a lattice
parameter of 0.2866 nm. Compare the answer w/ the
measured density of 7.870 g/cm3.
= 2 (55.85) .
(2.866x10-8)3(6.023x1023)
= 7.878 g/cm3 > meas.
Chapter 3 - 39
Densities of Material Classes
In general Metals/
Graphite/
Composites/
metals > ceramics > polymers Alloys
Ceramics/
Semicond
Polymers
fibers
30
Why? Platinum
Based on data in Table B1, Callister
*GFRE, CFRE, & AFRE are Glass,
20 Gold, W
Metals have... Tantalum Carbon, & Aramid Fiber-Reinforced
Epoxy composites (values based on
• close-packing 60% volume fraction of aligned fibers
10 Silver, Mo in an epoxy matrix).
(metallic bonding) Cu,Ni
Steels
• often large atomic masses Tin, Zinc
Zirconia
(g/cm3 )
5
Ceramics have... 4
Titanium
Al oxide
Diamond
• less dense packing 3 Si nitride
Aluminum Glass -soda Glass fibers
• often lighter elements Concrete
Silicon PTFE GFRE*
2
Polymers have... Magnesium Graphite
Silicone
Carbon fibers
CFRE*
Aramid fibers
PVC
• low packing density PET
PC
AFRE*
1
(often amorphous) HDPE, PS
PP, LDPE
• lighter elements (C,H,O)
0.5
Composites have... 0.4
Wood
Chapter 3 - 41
Examples
Gray tin
White tin
Chapter 3 - 42
Problems
1. Show for the body centered cubic crystal structure that the
unit cell edge length a and the atomic radius R are related
through a = 4R/ .
2. Show that the APF for BCC = 0.68
3. On the basis of ionic radii, what crystal structure would
you predict for FeO?
• Hint: FeO is an AX type of compound, det. the cation-
anion radii ratio, rc/ra
4. On the basis of crystal structure, compute for the
theoretical density of NaCl.
5. The density of potassium w/c has the BCC structure &
one atom per lattice point is 0.855 g/cm3. The atomic
weight of potassium is 39.09 g/mol. Calc. a) lattice
parameter, b) atomic radius of potassium, in Å.
Chapter 3 - 43
CRYSTAL SYSTEMS
ISSUES TO ADDRESS...
Chapter 3 - 44
Crystallographic Directions, and Planes
Why?
Chapter 3 - 45
Crystallographic Directions, and Planes
Chapter 3 - 46
Crystal Systems – Some Definitional information
14 crystal lattices
Chapter 3 - 48
7 Crystal Systems
orthorhombic hexagonal
monoclinic trigonal
cubic tetragonal triclinic
Chapter 3 -
Chapter 3 - 51
Crystal Systems – Some Definitional information
000
y
a b
Point coordinates for unit cell
x corner are 111
z 2c
Point
Coordinates
000
100
111
101
Chapter 3 - 54
General Rules for Lattice Directions,
Planes & Miller Indices
Chapter 3 - 55
Miller Indices for Directions
Method
Chapter 3 - 56
Procedure:
1. Any line (or vector direction) is specified by 2 points.
• The first point is, typically, at the origin (000).
• If not determine the coordinates and note it as tail
Chapter 3 - 62
Note: for some crystal structures, different directions can be equivalent.
e.g. For cubic crystals, the directions are all equivalent by symmetry:
• Algorithm
1. Read off intercepts of plane with axes in
terms of a, b, c
2. Take reciprocals of intercepts
3. Reduce to smallest integer values
4. Enclose in parentheses, no
commas i.e., (hkl)
Chapter 3 - 64
Importance of Miller Indices of Planes in Unit cells
Chapter 3 - 65
Why are planes in a lattice important?
Chapter 3 -
14 Crystal Lattices
Chapter 3 - 68
SUMMARY
• Atoms may assemble into crystalline or
amorphous structures.
• Common metallic crystal structures are FCC, BCC, and
Chapter 3 - 69
SUMMARY
Chapter 3 - 70