Crystallography
Crystallography
Crystallography
• PLANES OF SYMMETRY
Any two dimensional surface that, when passed through the center of the
crystal, divides it into two symmetrical parts that are MIRROR IMAGES
is a PLANE OF SYMMETRY
Any line through the center of the crystal around which the crystal may be
rotated so that after a definite angular revolution the crystal form
appears the same as before is termed an axis of symmetry. Depending
on the amount or degrees of rotation necessary, four types of axes of
symmetry are possible when you are considering crystallography:
When rotation repeats form every 120 degrees, then we have threefold or
TRIGONAL SYMMETRY.
When rotation repeats form every 180 degrees, then we have twofold or
BINARY SYMMETRY.
• CENTER OF SYMMETRY.
Most crystals have a center of
symmetry, even though they may not
possess either planes of symmetry or
axes of symmetry. Triclinic crystals
usually only have a center of
symmetry. If you can pass an
imaginary line from the surface of a
crystal face through the center of the
crystal (the axial cross) and it
intersects a similar point on a face
equidistance from the center, then the
crystal has a center of symmetry.
HABIT is the correct term to indicate outward appearance. Habit, when applied
to natural crystals and minerals, includes such descriptive terms as tabular,
equidimensional, massive, reniform, drusy, and encrusting.
A FORM is a group of crystal faces, all having the same relationship to the elements
of symmetry of a given crystal system. These crystal faces display the same physical
and chemical properties because the ATOMIC ARRANGEMENT (internal
geometrical relationships) of the atoms composing them is the same.
• (1) CUBIC
• (2) TETRAGONAL
• (3) ORTHORHOMBIC
• (4) HEXAGONAL
• (5) MONOCLINIC
• (6) TRICLINIC
The Six Crystal Systems
Name Unit Cell Dimentions Angles
Isometric(cubic) a=b=c
There are also 4 diagonal axes of 3-fold rotary inversion that pass
through the form at the point where the cube's 3 faces would join.
There are 6 directions of 2-fold symmetry (at the center of the line
formed by the intersection of 2 planes).
Four axes three of the axes fall in the same plane and
intersect at the axial cross at 120 degrees between the
positive ends.
These 3 axes, labeled a1, a2, and a3, are the same length.
The fourth axis, termed c, may be longer or shorter than the
a axes set. The c axis also passes through the intersection of
the a axes set at right angle to the plane formed by the a set.
Monoclinic system