The defining property of a crystal is its inherent symmetry. Performing certain symmetry operations on the crystal lattice leaves it unchanged. All crystals have
translational symmetry in three directions, but some have other symmetry elements as well. For example, rotating the crystal 180° about a certain axis may result in an atomic configuration that is identical to the original configuration; the crystal has twofold rotational symmetry about this axis. In addition to rotational symmetry, a crystal may have symmetry in the form of mirror planes, and also the so-called compound symmetries, which are a combination of translation and rotation or mirror symmetries. A full classification of a crystal is achieved when all inherent symmetries of the crystal are identified.
Lattice systems Lattice systems are a grouping of crystal structures according to the point groups of their lattice. All crystals fall into one of seven lattice systems. They are related to, but not the same as the seven
crystal systems. The most symmetric, the
cubic or isometric system, has the symmetry of a
cube, that is, it exhibits four threefold rotational axes oriented at 109.5° (the
tetrahedral angle) with respect to each other. These threefold axes lie along the body diagonals of the cube. The other six lattice systems, are
hexagonal,
tetragonal,
rhombohedral (often confused with the
trigonal crystal system),
orthorhombic,
monoclinic and
triclinic which is the least symmetrical as it possess only identity (E).
Bravais lattices Bravais lattices, also referred to as
space lattices, describe the geometric arrangement of the lattice points,
Crystal systems A crystal system is a set of point groups in which the point groups themselves and their corresponding space groups are assigned to a lattice system. Of the 32 point groups that exist in three dimensions, most are assigned to only one lattice system, in which case the crystal system and lattice system both have the same name. However, five point groups are assigned to two lattice systems, rhombohedral and hexagonal, because both lattice systems exhibit threefold rotational symmetry. These point groups are assigned to the trigonal crystal system. In total there are seven crystal systems: triclinic, monoclinic, orthorhombic, tetragonal, trigonal, hexagonal, and cubic.
Point groups The
crystallographic point group or
crystal class is the mathematical group comprising the symmetry operations that leave at least one point unmoved and that leave the appearance of the crystal structure unchanged. These symmetry operations include •
Reflection, which reflects the structure across a
reflection plane •
Rotation, which rotates the structure a specified portion of a circle about a
rotation axis •
Inversion, which changes the sign of the coordinate of each point with respect to a
center of symmetry or
inversion point •
Improper rotation, which consists of a rotation about an axis followed by an inversion. Rotation axes (proper and improper), reflection planes, and centers of symmetry are collectively called
symmetry elements. There are 32 possible crystal classes. Each one can be classified into one of the seven crystal systems.
Space groups In addition to the operations of the point group, the
space group of the crystal structure contains translational symmetry operations. These include: • Pure
translations, which move a point along a vector •
Screw axes, which rotate a point around an axis while translating parallel to the axis. •
Glide planes, which reflect a point through a plane while translating it parallel to the plane. There are 230 distinct space groups. == Atomic coordination ==