s of 90°, and four edges have dihedral angles of 60°. Some tetragonal disphenoids will form
honeycombs. The disphenoid whose four vertices are (-1,0,0), (1,0,0), (0,1,1), and (0,1,-1) is such a disphenoid. Each of its four faces is an isosceles triangle with edges of lengths \sqrt{3}, \sqrt{3}, and 2. It can
tessellate space to form the
disphenoid tetrahedral honeycomb. As describes, it can be folded without cutting or overlaps from a single sheet of
A4 paper. "Disphenoid" is also used to describe two forms of
crystal: • A wedge-shaped crystal form of the
tetragonal or
orthorhombic system. It has four triangular faces that are alike and that correspond in position to alternate faces of the tetragonal or orthorhombic
dipyramid. It is symmetrical about each of three mutually perpendicular diad axes of symmetry in all classes except the tetragonal-disphenoidal, in which the form is generated by an inverse tetrad axis of symmetry. • A crystal form bounded by eight
scalene triangles arranged in pairs, constituting a tetragonal
scalenohedron. ==Other uses==