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More on symmetry. Learning Outcomes: By the end of this section you should: have consolidated your knowledge of point groups and be able to draw stereograms be able to derive equivalent positions for mirrors, and certain rotations, roto-inversions, glides and screw axes
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More on symmetry Learning Outcomes: By the end of this section you should: • have consolidated your knowledge of point groups and be able to draw stereograms • be able to derive equivalent positions for mirrors, and certain rotations, roto-inversions, glides and screw axes • understand and be able to use matrices for different symmetry elements • be familiar with the basics of space groups and know the difference between symmorphic & non-symmorphic
The story so far… In the lectures we have discussed point symmetry: • Rotations • Mirrors • In the workshops we have looked at plane symmetry which involves translation = ua + vb + wc • Glides • Screw axes
Above Below Back to stereograms and point symmetry Example: 2-fold rotation perpendicular to plane (2)
More examples Example: 2-fold rotation in plane (2) Example: mirror in plane (m)
Combinations Example: 2-fold rotation perpendicular to mirror (2/m) Example: 3 perpendicular 2-fold rotations (222)
Roto-Inversions A rotation followed by an inversion through the origin (in this case the centre of the stereogram) Example: “bar 4” = inversion tetrad More examples in sheet.
Special positions When the object under study lies on a symmetry element mm2 example General positions Special positions Equivalent positions
-x, y, z b x, y, z a In terms of axes… Again, from workshop: • Take a point at (x y z) • Simple mirror in bc plane
c (x’ y’ z’) r’ r (x y z) b a General convention • Right hand rule • (x y z) (x’ y’ z’) or r’ = Rr R represents the matrix of the point operation
-x, y, z b x, y, z a Back to the mirror… • Take a point at (x y z) • Simple mirror in bc plane
Other examples roto-inversion around z Left as an example to show with a diagram.
More complex cases For non-orthogonal, high symmetry axes, it becomes more complex, in terms of deriving from a figure. 3-fold example: b a
3-fold and 6-fold It is “obvious” that 62 and 64 are equivalent to 3 and 32, respectively. etc.
32 crystallographic point groups • display all possibilities for the symmetry of space-filling shapes • form the basis (with Bravais lattices) of space groups
32 crystallographic point groups Centrosymmetric – have a centre of symmetry Enantiomorphic – opposite, like a hand and its mirror * - polar, or pyroelectric, point groups
Space operations These involve a point operation R (rotation, mirror, roto-inversion) followed by a translation Can be described by the Seitz operator: e.g.
, a , c , Glide planes The simplest glide planes are those that act along an axis, a b or c Thus the translation is ½ way along the cell followed by a reflection (which changes the handedness: ) Here the a glide plane is perpendicular to the c-axisThis gives symmetry operator ½+x, y, -z.
n glide n glide = Diagonal glide Here the translation vector has components in two (or sometimes three) directions a + + , - b + + So for example the translations would be (a b)/2 Special circumstances for cubic & tetragonal
a + + , - b + + n glide Here the glide plane is in the plane xy (perpendicular to c) Symmetry operator ½+x, ½+y, -z
d glide d glide = Diamond glide Here the translation vector has components in two (or sometimes three) directions , , - - a + + , - + , - , - b + + So for example the translations would be (a b)/4 Special circumstances for cubic & tetragonal
, , - - a + + , - + , - , - b + + d glide Here the glide plane is in the plane xy (perpendicular to c) Symmetry operator ¼+x, ¼+y, -z
17 Plane groups Studied (briefly) in the workshop Combinations of point symmetry and glide planes E. S. Fedorov (1881)
Another example Build up from one point:
Screw axes Rotation followed by a translation Notation is nx where n is the simple rotation, as before x indicates translation as a fraction x/n along the axis /2 2 rotation axis 21 screw axis
Screw axes - examples Note e.g. 31 and 32 give different handedness Looking down from above
Example • P42 (tetragonal) – any additional symmetry?
Matrix 4 fold rotation and translation of ½ unit cell Carry this on….
Symmorphic Space Groups If we build up into 3d we go from point to plane to space groups From the 32 point groups and the different Bravais lattices, we can get 73 space groups which involve ONLY rotations, reflection and rotoinversions. Non-symmorphic space groups involve translational elements (screw axes and glide planes). There are 157 non-symmorphic space groups 230 space groups in total!
Systematic Absences #2 Systematic absences in (hkl) reflections Bravais lattices e.g. Reflection conditions h+k+l = 2n Body centred • Similarly glide & screw axes associated with other absences: • 0kl, h0l, hk0 absences = glide planes • h00, 0k0, 00l absences = screw axes Example: 0kl – glide plane is perpendicular to a if k=2n b glide if l = 2n c clide if k+1 = 2n n glide
Space Group example • P2/c Equivalent positions:
Space Group example P21/c : note glide plane shifted to y=¼ because convention “likes” inversions at origin Equivalent positions:
Special positions Taken from last example If the general equivalent positions are: • Special positions are at: • ½,0,½ ½,½,0 • 0,0,½ 0,½,0 • ½,0,0 ½,½, ½ • 0,0,0 0,½,½
Space groups… • Allow us to fully describe a crystal structure with the minimum number of atomic positions • Describe the full symmetry of a crystal structure • Restrict macroscopic properties (see symmetry workshop) – e.g. BaTiO3 • Allow us to understand relationships between similar crystal structures and understand polymorphic transitions
Example: YBCO Handout of Structure and Space group • Most atoms lie on special positions • YBa2Cu3O7 is the orthorhombic phase • Space group: Pmmm