Compounds that consist of more than one element (e.g.
binary compounds) often have crystal structures based on the hexagonal crystal family. Some of the more common ones are listed here. These structures can be viewed as two or more interpenetrating sublattices where each sublattice occupies the
interstitial sites of the others.
Wurtzite structure The wurtzite crystal structure is referred to by the
Strukturbericht designation B4 and the
Pearson symbol hP4. The corresponding
space group is
No. 186 (in International Union of Crystallography classification) or
P63mc (in
Hermann–Mauguin notation). The Hermann-Mauguin symbols in
P63mc can be read as follows: •
63.. : a six fold screw rotation around the c-axis •
.m. : a mirror plane with normal {100} •
..c : glide plane in the
c-directions with normal {120}. Among the compounds that can take the wurtzite structure are
wurtzite itself (
ZnS with up to 8%
iron instead of
zinc),
silver iodide (AgI),
zinc oxide (ZnO),
cadmium sulfide (CdS),
cadmium selenide (CdSe),
silicon carbide (α-SiC),
gallium nitride (GaN),
aluminium nitride (AlN),
boron nitride (w-BN) and other
semiconductors. In most of these compounds, wurtzite is not the favored form of the bulk crystal, but the structure can be favored in some nanocrystal forms of the material. In materials with more than one crystal structure, the prefix "w-" is sometimes added to the
empirical formula to denote the wurtzite crystal structure, as in
w-BN. Each of the two individual atom types forms a sublattice which is
hexagonal close-packed (HCP-type). When viewed all together, the atomic positions are the same as in
lonsdaleite (hexagonal
diamond). Each atom is
tetrahedrally coordinated. The structure can also be described as an HCP lattice of zinc with sulfur atoms occupying half of the
tetrahedral voids or vice versa. The wurtzite structure is
non-centrosymmetric (i.e., lacks
inversion symmetry). Due to this, wurtzite crystals, such as GaN, InN, and AlN, can have properties such as
piezoelectricity and
pyroelectricity, which centrosymmetric crystals lack. The polar nature of these crystals enables electronic devices such as the high electron mobility transistors (HEMT).
Nickel arsenide structure The nickel arsenide structure consists of two interpenetrating sublattices: a primitive hexagonal nickel sublattice and a
hexagonal close-packed arsenic sublattice. Each nickel atom is
octahedrally coordinated to six arsenic atoms, while each arsenic atom is
trigonal prismatically coordinated to six nickel atoms. The structure can also be described as an HCP lattice of arsenic with nickel occupying each
octahedral void. Compounds adopting the NiAs structure are generally the
chalcogenides,
arsenides,
antimonides and
bismuthides of
transition metals. The following are the members of the nickeline group: •
Achavalite: •
Breithauptite: • Freboldite: • Kotulskite: • Langistite: • Nickeline: • Sobolevskite: • Sudburyite: == In two dimensions ==