, 1808). s (
Wollaston, 1813). From the late 18th century it became apparent that a crystal of a substance was composed of units, whether thought of as atoms, ions, molecules, or polyhedra, in a regular spatial arrangement, termed its
crystal structure. The most notable early theory for crystal structures was that of
René Just Haüy. In 1801 Haüy, published his
Traité de Minéralogie in four volumes, the last of which was an atlas of plates which was considered "among the most wonderful of the 19th century". It has been described as "a work of comprehensive insight, and much of it, written with literary fluency". In this work Haüy described how the law of rational indices establishes relationships between the orientations of the crystal faces, and explains that crystalline solids are formed by replicas of what would now be considered a
unit cell. Haüy's theory called for fixed mineral species (based on their
molécule intégrante), fixed crystal morphology, and constant chemical composition. This was a mineralogical equivalent to the
law of definite proportions in chemistry. John G. Burke (1966) and (1984) proposed Haüy's crystal structure theory as an example of a
paradigm in the sense of
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions by
Thomas S. Kuhn (1962). In 1822 Haüy published
Traité de Cristallographie an updated version of his work of 1801. Haüy postulated, "to each specific substance with a well defined chemical composition, capable of existence in a crystalline form, there corresponds a shape that is specific and characteristic of that substance." In 1808
John Dalton published his atomic theory of matter. In Dalton's theory, there were four key assertions: "matter is made up of roughly spherical atoms, which were indivisible and indestructible; all atoms of a given element are identical in mass and properties; compounds are formed by a combination of two or more different kinds of atoms; and chemical reactions involve the rearrangement of atoms". In his book
A New System of Chemical Philosophy, crystals are considered as a periodic arrangement of spherical atoms. However, Dalton stated that it was premature to form any theory of crystallization. Kuhn proposed
Dalton's atomic theory as an example of a
paradigm in which Dalton asserted that atoms can only combine in simple, whole-number ratios (
law of multiple proportions). Under this new paradigm, any reaction which did not occur in fixed proportion could not be a chemical process. There was a contradiction between the crystallographic and chemical paradigms. Haüy's theory asserted that crystals were composed of polyhedral units stacked up in three dimensions without gaps; Dalton's theory, by contrast, implied that crystals were constructed by a periodic arrangement of spherical atoms in space. Haüy's theory was generally accepted by his fellow mineralogists in the period 1801–1815 but then came under attack from the German dynamist school led by
Christian Samuel Weiss. Weiss and his followers studied the external symmetry of crystals rather than their internal structure. In 1819, Weiss demonstrated the generality of the phenomenon of
hemihedry (half of the vertices/edges/faces of a crystal act differently from the other half), thus challenging Haüy's holohedral approach (all vertices/edges/faces of a crystal act in the same manner). Haüy's crystal structure theory was criticised as over-simplistic by
William Hyde Wollaston in 1809 and by
Henry James Brooke in 1819. Haüy also tended to ignore experimental results that contradicted his structural theory, such as those achieved with the more accurate reflection
goniometer invented by Wollaston in 1809. In 1813 Wollaston adopted Dalton's ideas and proposed using
sphere packing to model
crystal structures. In 1814
André-Marie Ampère published a theory of the chemical combination of substances, based on Haüy's polyhedral forms. However, Ampère's work had little impact on contemporary chemists. In 1819
David Brewster classified crystals according to their optical properties, as isotropic, uniaxial, or biaxial. In a paper published in 1830 Brewster attempted to relate the phenomenon of
double refraction to the arrangement of the molecules in crystals. If a crystal has three axes at right angles to each other then, if they are equivalent, the crystal is isotropic, if two are equivalent and the third different, the crystal is uniaxial, and if all three are different, the crystal is biaxial. In 1822
John Herschel proposed a causal relationship between the handedness of quartz crystals (right- or left-handed) and the direction of their optical rotation. In 1840 described the first crystallization of a protein; Hünefeld obtained lamellar crystals (later identified as
haemoglobin) by putting the blood of an earthworm between two slides. ==Isomorphism==