The space groups in three dimensions are made from combinations of the 32
crystallographic point groups with the 14
Bravais lattices, each of the latter belonging to one of 7
lattice systems. What this means is that the action of any element of a given space group can be expressed as the action of an element of the appropriate point group followed optionally by a translation. A space group is thus some combination of the translational symmetry of a
unit cell (including
lattice centering), the point group symmetry operations of
reflection,
rotation and
improper rotation (also called rotoinversion), and the
screw axis and
glide plane symmetry operations. The combination of all these symmetry operations results in a total of 230 different space groups describing all possible crystal symmetries. The number of replicates of the
asymmetric unit in a unit cell is thus the number of lattice points in the cell times the order of the point group. This ranges from 1 in the case of space group P1 to 192 for a space group like Fmm, the
NaCl structure.
Elements fixing a point The elements of the space group fixing a point of space are the identity element, reflections, rotations and
improper rotations, including
inversion points.
Translations The translations form a normal abelian subgroup of
rank 3, called the Bravais lattice (so named after French physicist
Auguste Bravais). There are 14 possible types of Bravais lattice. The
quotient of the space group by the Bravais lattice is a finite group which is one of the 32 possible
point groups.
Glide planes A
glide plane is a reflection in a plane, followed by a translation parallel with that plane. This is noted by , , or , depending on which axis the glide is along. There is also the glide, which is a glide along the half of a diagonal of a face, and the glide, which is a fourth of the way along either a face or space diagonal of the unit cell. The latter is called the diamond glide plane as it features in the
diamond structure. In 17 space groups, due to the centering of the cell, the glides occur in two perpendicular directions simultaneously,
i.e. the same glide plane can be called or , or , or . For example, group Abm2 could be also called Acm2, group Ccca could be called Cccb. In 1992, it was suggested to use symbol for such planes. The symbols for five space groups have been modified:
Screw axes A
screw axis is a rotation about an axis, followed by a translation along the direction of the axis. These are noted by a number, , to describe the degree of rotation, where the number is how many operations must be applied to complete a full rotation (e.g., 3 would mean a rotation one third of the way around the axis each time). The degree of translation is then added as a subscript showing how far along the axis the translation is, as a portion of the parallel lattice vector. So, 2 is a twofold rotation followed by a translation of of the lattice vector.
General formula The general formula for the action of an element of a space group is : where is its matrix, is its vector, and where the element transforms point into point . In general, , where is a unique function of that is zero for being the identity. The matrices form a
point group that is a basis of the space group; the lattice must be symmetric under that point group, but the crystal structure itself may not be symmetric under that point group as applied to any particular point (that is, without a translation). For example, the
diamond cubic structure does not have any point where the
cubic point group applies. The lattice dimension can be less than the overall dimension, resulting in a "subperiodic" space group. For (overall dimension, lattice dimension): • (1,1): One-dimensional
line groups • (2,1): Two-dimensional
line groups:
frieze groups • (2,2):
Wallpaper groups • (3,1): Three-dimensional
line groups; with the 3D crystallographic point groups, the
rod groups • (3,2):
Layer groups • (3,3): The space groups discussed in this article
Chirality The 65 "Sohncke" space groups, not containing any mirrors, inversion points, improper rotations or glide planes, yield
chiral crystals, not identical to their mirror image; whereas space groups that do include at least one of those give achiral crystals. Achiral molecules sometimes form chiral crystals, but chiral molecules always form chiral crystals, in one of the space groups that permit this. Among the 65 Sohncke groups are 22 that come in 11
enantiomorphic pairs.
Combinations Only certain combinations of symmetry elements are possible in a space group. Translations are always present, and the space group P1 has only translations and the identity element. The presence of mirrors implies glide planes as well, and the presence of rotation axes implies screw axes as well, but the converses are not true. An inversion and a mirror implies two-fold screw axes, and so on. ==Notation==