From Wikipedia,
the free encyclopedia
In
geometry,
solid state physics and
mineralogy, particularly in
describing
crystal structure, a
primitive cell, is a minimum
cell corresponding to a single
lattice point of a structure
with
translational symmetry in 2D,
3D, or other dimensions. A lattice
can be characterized by the
geometry of its primitive cell.
The primitive cell is a
fundamental domain with
respect to translational symmetry
only. In the case of additional
symmetries a fundamental domain is
smaller.
A
crystal can be categorized by
its lattice and the atoms that lie
in a primitive cell (the basis).
A cell will fill all the lattice
space without leaving gaps by
repetition of crystal translation
operations.
Primitive translation
vectors are used to define a
crystal translation vector,
,
and also gives a lattice cell of
smallest volume for a particular
lattice. The lattice and
translation vectors
,
,
and
are primitive if the
atoms look the same from any
lattice points using integers
u1,
u2,
and u3.
-

The primitive cell is defined by
the primitive axes (vectors)
,
,
and
.
The volume,
,
of the primitive cell is given by
the parallelepiped from the above
axes as,
-
.
A
Wigner-Seitz cell is an
example of another kind of
primitive cell. In certain
circumstances, primitive cell
is synonymous with
unit cell. However, the
conventional description of
cubic lattices, such as body
centered cubic (BCC) and face
centered cubic (FCC) lattices,
relies on a cubic unit cell. In
the BCC and FCC cases, the
primitive cell is distinct from
this conventional unit cell.
The general mathematical
concept behind the primitive cell
is termed the
fundamental domain or the
Voronoi cell. The primitive
cell of the
reciprocal lattice in
momentum space is called the
Brillouin zone.