| Themes > Science > Physics > Solid State Physics > Atomic Bonding and Crystal Structure > Interatomic Forces and Crystal Structure > Close-Packed Structures | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The crystal structures of a large number of metals, alloys and inoganic compounds can be described geometrically in terms of a close-packing of equal spheres, held together by interatomic forces. Frequently, the positions of one kind of atoms of ions in inorganic structures correspond approximately to those of equal spheres in a close-packing with the other atoms distributed among the voids. All such structures will be referred to as close-packed structures though they may not be ideally close-packed. The close-packed arrangement of equal spheres in a plane is shown in Fig. 1 where each sphere is in contact with six other spheres. Since the symmetry of this layer is 6mm , such a layer is called a hexagonal close-packed layer. Let this layer be called an A layer. It contains two types of triangular voids, one with the apex of the triangle upwards in the diagram and labelled B, and the other with the apex downwards and labelled C. In the two-dimensional unit cell indicated in the figure (a=b, In a three-dimensional packing the next
hexagonal close-packed layer of spheres can occupy either the sites B or
C, but not both. Similarly the layer above a B layer can be either C or A
and that above a C layer either A or B. No two successive layers can be
alike. The positions B and C are displaced with respect to A by vectors +S
and -S respectively where S = a/3 Any sequence of the letters, A. B and C
with no two successive letters alike represents a possible manner of
close-packing equal spheres. In such a three- dimensional close-packing,
each sphere is surrounded by and touches 12 other spheres. This is the
maximum number of spheres that can be arranged to touch a given sphere and
it provides the maximum packing density for an infinite lattice
arrangement. (There are however other arrangements of a finite
number of equal spheres which have a higher packing density1.)
It is evident from the foregoing that the number of different close-packed
structures that are possible in three dimensions is infinite. The identity
period or c dimension of the hexagonal unit cell in a
three-dimensional close-packed structure is determined by the number of
layers after which the stacking sequences repeats itself. The two most
common close-packed structures which occur in nature are: (i) the
hexagonal close-packing (hcp) with a layer stacking ABAB.. and (ii) the
cubic close-packing (ccp) with a layer stacking ABCABC.. They have
identity periods of two and three layers respectively. In addition to the
hcp and ccp modifications, a number of materials, like SiC, ZnS, CdI2,
PbI2, AgI and GaSe are known2,3,4 to crystallize in
a large variety of close-packed structures, called polytypes, with larger
identity periods. The different polytype structures of the same material
have identical a and b dimensions of their hexagonal
unit cell but differ along c . Even for the same identity period
of n layers, a number of different close-packed structures are
possible with different arrangements of the n layers. The extent
to which a real crystal structure approximates to a close- packing can be
determined from the h /a ratio, where h is the
separation between successive close-packed layers and a is the
diameter of the spheres. For an ideally close-packed structure, this ratio
must be
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