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Symmetry

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Lecture 2: Crystal Symmetry
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Page 1: Symmetry

Lecture 2: Crystal Symmetry

Page 2: Symmetry

A crystal’s unit cell dimensions are defined by six numbers, the lengths of the 3 axes, a, b, and c, and the three interaxial angles, , and .

Unit cell is the smallest unit of a crystal, which, if repeated, could generate the whole crystal.

Crystals are made of infinite number of unit cells

Page 3: Symmetry

A crystal lattice is a 3-D stack of unit cells

Crystal lattice is an imaginative grid system in three dimensions in which every point (or node) has an environment that is identical to that of any other point or node.

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Symmetry

A state in which parts on opposite sides of a plane, line, or point display arrangements that are related to one another via a symmetry operation such as translation, rotation, reflection or inversion.

Application of the symmetry operators leaves the entire crystal unchanged.

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Symmetry Elements

Rotation

turns all the points in the asymmetric unit around one axis, the center of rotation. A rotation does not change the handedness of figures. The center of rotation is the only invariant point (point that maps onto itself).

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Symmetry elements: rotation

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Symmetry elements: rotation

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Symmetry Elements

Translation moves all the points in the asymmetric unit the same distance in the same direction. This has no effect on the handedness of figures in the plane. There are no invariant points (points that map onto themselves) under a translation.

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Symmetry Elements

Screw axes (rotation + translation)

rotation about the axis of symmetry by 360/n, followed by a translation parallel to the axis by r/n of the unit cell length in that direction. (r < n)

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120 rotation1/3 unit cell translation

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Symmetry Elements

Inversion, or center of symmetryevery point on one side of a center of symmetry has a similar point at an equal distance on the opposite side of the center of symmetry.

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Symmetry Elements

Mirror plane or Reflection

flips all points in the asymmetric unit over a line, which is called the mirror, and thereby changes the handedness of any figures in the asymmetric unit. The points along the mirror line are all invariant points (points that map onto themselves) under a reflection.

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Symmetry elements: mirror plane and inversion center

The handedness is changed.

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Symmetry Elements

Glide reflection (mirror plane + translation)

reflects the asymmetric unit across a mirror and then translates parallel to the mirror. A glide plane changes the handedness of figures in the asymmetric unit. There are no invariant points (points that map onto themselves) under a glide reflection.

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Symmetries in crystallography

• Crystal systems

• Lattice systems

• Space group symmetry

• Point group symmetry

• Laue symmetry, Patterson symmetry

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Crystal system

• Crystals are grouped into seven crystal systems, according to characteristic symmetry of their unit cell.

• The characteristic symmetry of a crystal is a combination of one or more rotations and inversions.

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Crystal System External Minimum Symmetry Unit Cell Properties

Triclinic None a, b, c, al, be, ga,Monoclinic One 2-fold axis, || to b (b unique) a, b, c, 90, be, 90Orthorhombic Three perpendicular 2-folds a, b, c, 90, 90, 90Tetragonal One 4-fold axis, parallel c a, a, c, 90, 90, 90Trigonal One 3-fold axis a, a, c, 90, 90, 120Hexagonal One 6-fold axis a, a, c, 90, 90, 120Cubic Four 3-folds along space diagonal a, a, ,a, 90, 90, 90

triclinictrigonal

hexagonal

cubic tetragonalmonoclinic

orthorhombic

7 Crystal Systems

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Lattices

• In 1848, Auguste Bravais demonstrated that in a 3-dimensional system there are fourteen possible lattices

• A Bravais lattice is an infinite array of discrete points with identical environment

• seven crystal systems + four lattice centering types = 14 Bravais lattices

• Lattices are characterized by translation symmetry

Auguste Bravais (1811-1863)

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No. Type Description

1 Primitive Lattice points on corners only. Symbol: P.

2 Face Centered Lattice points on corners as well as centered on faces. Symbols: A (bc faces); B (ac faces); C (ab faces).

3 All-Face Centered Lattice points on corners as well as in the centers of all faces. Symbol: F.

4 Body-Centered Lattice points on corners as well as in the center of the unit cell body. Symbol: I.

Four lattice centering types

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Tetragonal lattices are either primitive (P) or body-centered (I)

C centered lattice =Primitive lattice

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Monoclinic lattices are either primitive or C centered

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Point group symmetry

• Inorganic crystals usually have perfect shape which reflects their internal symmetry

• Point groups are originally used to describe the symmetry of crystal.

• Point group symmetry does not consider translation.

• Included symmetry elements are rotation, mirror plane, center of symmetry, rotary inversion.

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Point group symmetry diagrams

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There are a total of 32 point groups

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N-fold axes with n=5 or n>6 does not occur in crystals

Adjacent spaces must be completely filled (no gaps, no overlaps).

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Laue class, Patterson symmetry

• Laue class corresponds to symmetry of reciprocal space (diffraction pattern)

• Patterson symmetry is Laue class plus allowed Bravais centering (Patterson map)

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The combination of all available symmetry operations (32 point groups), together with translation symmetry, within the all available lattices (14 Bravais lattices) lead to 230 Space Groups that describe the only ways in which identical objects can be arranged in an infinite lattice. The International Tables list those by symbol and number, together with symmetry operators, origins, reflection conditions, and space group projection diagrams.

Space groups

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A diagram from International Table of Crystallography

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Identification of the Space Group is called indexing the crystal.The International Tables for X-ray Crystallography tell us a hugeamount of information about any given space group. For instance, If we look up space group P2, we find it has a 2-fold rotation axis and the following symmetry equivalent positions:

X , Y , Z -X , Y , -Z

and an asymmetric unit defined by:

0 ≤ x ≤ 10 ≤ y ≤ 10 ≤ z ≤ 1/2

An interactive tutorial on Space Groups can be found on-line in Bernhard Rupp’s Crystallography 101 Course: http://www-structure.llnl.gov/Xray/tutorial/spcgrps.htm

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Space group P1

Point group 1 + Bravais lattice P1

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Space group P1bar

Point group 1bar + Bravais lattice P1

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Space group P2

Point group 2 + Bravais lattice “primitive monoclinic”

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Space group P21

Point group 2 + Bravais lattice “primitive monoclinic”, but consider screw axis

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Coordinate triplets, equivalent positions

r = ax + by + cz, Therefore, each point can be described by its fractional coordinates, that is, by its coordinate triplet (x, y, z)

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Space group determination

• Symmetry in diffraction pattern

• Systematic absences

• Space groups with mirror planes and inversion centers do not apply to protein crystals, leaving only 65 possible space groups.

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A lesson in symmetry from M. C. Escher

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Another one:

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Asymmetric unit

Recall that the unit cell of a crystal is the smallest 3-D geometric figure that can be stacked without rotation to form the lattice. The asymmetric unit is the smallest part of a crystal structure from which the complete structure can be built using space group symmetry. The asymmetric unit may consist of only a part of a molecule, or it can contain more than one molecule, if the molecules not related by symmetry.

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Matthew Coefficient

• Matthews found that for many protein crystals the ratio of the unit cell volume and the molecular weight is between 1.7 and 3.5Å3/Da with most values around 2.15Å3/Da

• Vm is often used to determine the number of molecules in each asymmetric unit.

• Non-crystallographic symmetry related molecules within the asymmetric unit


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