Crystallographic point group

In crystallography, a crystallographic point group is a set of symmetry operations, like rotations or reflections, that leave a central point fixed while moving other directions and faces of the crystal to the positions of features of the same kind. For a periodic crystal (as opposed to a quasicrystal), the group must also be consistent with maintenance of the three-dimensional translational symmetry that defines crystallinity. The macroscopic properties of a crystal would look exactly the same before and after any of the operations in its point group. In the classification of crystals, each point group is also known as a crystal class.

There are infinitely many three-dimensional point groups. However, the crystallographic restriction of the infinite families of general point groups results in there being only 32 crystallographic point groups. These 32 point groups are one-and-the same as the 32 types of morphological (external) crystalline symmetries derived in 1830 by Johann Friedrich Christian Hessel from a consideration of observed crystal forms.

The point group of a crystal, among other things, determines directional variation of the physical properties that arise from its structure, including optical properties such as whether it is birefringent, or whether it shows the Pockels effect.

Notation

The point groups are denoted by their component symmetries. There are a few standard notations used by crystallographers, mineralogists, and physicists.

For the correspondence of the two systems below, see crystal system.

Schoenflies notation

In Schoenflies notation, point groups are denoted by a letter symbol with a subscript. The symbols used in crystallography mean the following:

  • Cn (for cyclic) indicates that the group has an n-fold rotation axis. Cnh is Cn with the addition of a mirror (reflection) plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation. Cnv is Cn with the addition of n mirror planes parallel to the axis of rotation.
  • S2n (for Spiegel, German for mirror) denotes a group that contains only a 2n-fold rotation-reflection axis.
  • Dn (for dihedral, or two-sided) indicates that the group has an n-fold rotation axis plus n twofold axes perpendicular to that axis. Dnh has, in addition, a mirror plane perpendicular to the n-fold axis. Dnd has, in addition to the elements of Dn, mirror planes parallel to the n-fold axis.
  • The letter T (for tetrahedron) indicates that the group has the symmetry of a tetrahedron. Td includes improper rotation operations, T excludes improper rotation operations, and Th is T with the addition of an inversion.
  • The letter O (for octahedron) indicates that the group has the symmetry of an octahedron (or cube), with (Oh) or without (O) improper operations (those that change handedness).

Due to the crystallographic restriction theorem, n = 1, 2, 3, 4, or 6 in 2- or 3-dimensional space.

n 1 2 3 4 6
Cn C1 C2 C3 C4 C6
Cnv C1v=C1h C2v C3v C4v C6v
Cnh C1h C2h C3h C4h C6h
Dn D1=C2 D2 D3 D4 D6
Dnh D1h=C2v D2h D3h D4h D6h
Dnd D1d=C2h D2d D3d D4d D6d
S2n S2 S4 S6 S8 S12

D4d and D6d are actually forbidden because they contain improper rotations with n=8 and 12 respectively. The 27 point groups in the table plus T, Td, Th, O and Oh constitute 32 crystallographic point groups.

Hermann–Mauguin notation

An abbreviated form of the Hermann–Mauguin notation commonly used for space groups also serves to describe crystallographic point groups. Group names are

Class Group names
Cubic 23m343243mm3m
Hexagonal 666m6226mm6m26mmm
Trigonal 33323m3m
Tetragonal 444m4224mm42m4mmm
Monoclinic
Orthorhombic
22m222mmm2mmm
Triclinic 11 Subgroup relations of the 32 crystallographic point groups
(rows represent group orders from bottom to top as: 1,2,3,4,6,8,12,16,24, and 48.)

The correspondence between different notations

Crystal system Hermann-Mauguin Shubnikov[1] Schoenflies Orbifold Coxeter Order
(full) (short)
Triclinic 11 C111[ ]+1
11 Ci = S2×[2+,2+]2
Monoclinic 22 C222[2]+2
mm Cs = C1h*[ ]2
2/m C2h2*[2,2+]4
Orthorhombic 222222 D2 = V222[2,2]+4
mm2mm2 C2v*22[2]4
mmm D2h = Vh*222[2,2]8
Tetragonal 44 C444[4]+4
44 S4[2+,4+]4
4/m C4h4*[2,4+]8
422422 D4422[4,2]+8
4mm4mm C4v*44[4]8
42m42m D2d = Vd2*2[2+,4]8
4/mmm D4h*422[4,2]16
Trigonal 33 C333[3]+3
33 C3i = S6[2+,6+]6
3232 D3322[3,2]+6
3m3m C3v*33[3]6
3 3m D3d2*3[2+,6]12
Hexagonal 66 C666[6]+6
66 C3h3*[2,3+]6
6/m C6h6*[2,6+]12
622622 D6622[6,2]+12
6mm6mm C6v*66[6]12
6m26m2 D3h*322[3,2]12
6/mmm D6h*622[6,2]24
Cubic 2323 T332[3,3]+12
3m3 Th3*2[3+,4]24
432432 O432[4,3]+24
43m43m Td*332[3,3]24
3 m3m Oh*432[4,3]48

See also

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-07-04. Retrieved 2011-11-25.
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