Crystal System - Lattice Systems

Lattice Systems

The distribution of the 14 Bravais lattice types into 7 lattice systems is given in the following table.

The 7 lattice systems The 14 Bravais Lattices
triclinic (parallelepiped)
monoclinic (right prism with parallelogram base; here seen from above) simple base-centered
orthorhombic (cuboid) simple base-centered body-centered face-centered
tetragonal (square cuboid) simple body-centered
rhombohedral
(trigonal trapezohedron)
hexagonal (centered regular hexagon)
cubic
(isometric; cube)
simple body-centered face-centered


In geometry and crystallography, a Bravais lattice is a category of symmetry groups for translational symmetry in three directions, or correspondingly, a category of translation lattices.

Such symmetry groups consist of translations by vectors of the form

where n1, n2, and n3 are integers and a1, a2, and a3 are three non-coplanar vectors, called primitive vectors.

These lattices are classified by space group of the translation lattice itself; there are 14 Bravais lattices in three dimensions; each can apply in one lattice system only. They represent the maximum symmetry a structure with the translational symmetry concerned can have.

All crystalline materials must, by definition fit in one of these arrangements (not including quasicrystals).

For convenience a Bravais lattice is depicted by a unit cell which is a factor 1, 2, 3 or 4 larger than the primitive cell. Depending on the symmetry of a crystal or other pattern, the fundamental domain is again smaller, up to a factor 48.

The Bravais lattices were studied by Moritz Ludwig Frankenheim (1801–1869), in 1842, who found that there were 15 Bravais lattices. This was corrected to 14 by A. Bravais in 1848.

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