| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Senn Miller,Senn Miller Retractor,Surgical Senn Miller,Senn Miller indianorthopaedic.com | About Dr. Miller, ND – Dr. Miller’s Family Tree Medical Center famtreemed.com | | Cleveland, Ohio: Dr. James Miller - Blanchard Miller Plastic... plasticsurgeryportal.com | Miller and Bounds Periodontics and Dental Implants: Todd E. Miller, D.D.S. millerandbounds.com |
Miller indices are a notation system in crystallography for planes and directions in crystal (Bravais) lattices. In particular, a family of lattice planes is determined by three integers There are also several related notations[1]:
In the context of crystal directions (not planes), the corresponding notations are:
Miller indices were introduced in 1839 by the British mineralogist William Hallowes Miller. The method was also historically known as the Millerian system, and the indices as Millerian,[2] although this is now rare. The precise meaning of this notation depends upon a choice of lattice vectors for the crystal, as described below. Usually, three primitive lattice vectors are used. However, for cubic crystal systems, the cubic lattice vectors are used even when they are not primitive (e.g., as in body-centered and face-centered crystals).
[edit] DefinitionThere are two equivalent ways to define the meaning of the Miller indices:[1] via a point in the reciprocal lattice, or as the inverse intercepts along the lattice vectors. Both definitions are given below. In either case, one needs to choose the three lattice vectors Then, given the three Miller indices That is, Equivalently, Considering only The related notation That is, it uses the direct lattice basis instead of the reciprocal lattice. Note that [edit] Case of cubic structuresFor the special case of simple cubic crystals, the lattice vectors are orthogonal and of equal length (usually denoted a); similarly for the reciprocal lattice. So, in this common case, the Miller indices For cubic crystals with lattice constant a, the spacing d between adjacent
Because of the symmetry of cubic crystals, it is possible to change the place and sign of the integers and have equivalent directions and planes:
For face-centered cubic and body-centered cubic lattices, the primitive lattice vectors are not orthogonal. However, in these cases the Miller indices are conventionally defined relative to the lattice vectors of the cubic supercell and hence are again simply the Cartesian directions. [edit] Case of hexagonal and rhombohedral structuresWith hexagonal and rhombohedral lattice systems, it is possible to use the Bravais-Miller index which has 4 numbers (h k i l)
Here h, k and l are identical to the Miller index, and i is a redundant index. This four-index scheme for labeling planes in a hexagonal lattice makes permutation symmetries apparent. For example, the similarity between In the figure at right, the (001) plane has a 3-fold symmetry: it remains unchanged by a rotation of 1/3 (2π/3 rad, 120°). The [100], [010] and the
There are also ad hoc schemes (e.g. in the transmission electron microscopy literature) for indexing hexagonal lattice vectors (rather than reciprocal lattice vectors or planes) with four indices. However they don't operate by similarly adding a redundant index to the regular three-index set. For example, the reciprocal lattice vector (hkl) as suggested above can be written as ha*+kb*+lc* if the reciprocal-lattice basis-vectors are a*, b*, and c*. For hexagonal crystals this may be expressed in terms of direct-lattice basis-vectors a, b and c as Hence zone indices of the direction perpendicular to plane (hkl) are, in suitably-normalized triplet form, simply [2h+k,h+2k,l(3/2)(a/c)2]. When four indices are used for the zone normal to plane (hkl), however, the literature often uses [h,k,-h-k,l(3/2)(a/c)2] instead[3]. Thus as you can see, four-index zone indices in square or angle brackets sometimes mix a single direct-lattice index on the right with reciprocal-lattice indices (normally in round or curly brackets) on the left. [edit] The crystallographic planes and directionsThe crystallographic directions are fictitious lines linking nodes (atoms, ions or molecules) of a crystal. Similarly, the crystallographic planes are fictitious planes linking nodes. Some directions and planes have a higher density of nodes; these dense planes have an influence on the behaviour of the crystal:
For all these reasons, it is important to determine the planes and thus to have a notation system. [edit] Integer vs. irrational Miller indices: Lattice planes and quasicrystalsOrdinarily, Miller indices are always integers by definition, and this constraint is physically significant. To understand this, suppose that we allow a plane (abc) where the Miller "indices" a, b, and c (defined as above) are not necessarily integers. If a, b, and c have rational ratios, then the same family of planes can be written in terms of integer indices For a plane (abc) where a, b, and c have irrational ratios, on the other hand, the intersection of the plane with the crystal is not periodic. It forms an aperiodic pattern known as a quasicrystal. In fact, this construction corresponds precisely to the standard "cut-and-project" method of defining a quasicrystal, using a plane with irrational-ratio Miller indices. (Although many quasicrystals, such as the Penrose tiling, are formed by "cuts" of periodic lattices in more than three dimensions, involving the intersection of more than one such hyperplane.) [edit] See also[edit] References
[edit] External links
|
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |