The smallest repeating unit of the crystal lattice is the unit cell, the building block of a crystal.
The unit cells which are all identical are defined in such a way that they fill space without overlapping. The 3D arrangement of atoms, molecules or ions inside a crystal is called a crystal lattice. It is made up of numerous unit cells. One of the three constituent particles takes up every lattice point.
A unit cell can either be primitive cubic, body-centred cubic (BCC) or face-centred cubic (FCC). In this section, we will discuss the three types of unit cell in detail.
Numerous unit cells together make a crystal lattice. Constituent particles like atoms and molecules are also present. Each lattice point is occupied by one such particle.
In the primitive cubic unit cell, the atoms are present only at the corners. Every atom at the corner is shared among 8 adjacent unit cells. There are 4 unit cells in the same layer and 4 in the upper (or lower) layer. Therefore, a particular unit cell has only 1/8 th of an atom. Each small sphere in the following figure represents the centre of a particle that occupies that particular position and not its size. This structure is known as an open structure.
Below is an open structure
In each cubic unit cell, there are 8 atoms at the corners. Therefore, the total number of atoms in one unit cell is
8 × 1/8 = 1 atom.
A BCC unit cell has atoms at each corner of the cube and an atom at the centre of the structure. The diagram shown below is an open structure. According to this structure, the atom at the body centre wholly belongs to the unit cell in which it is present.
Body centred Cubic (BCC) Unit Cell
Thus, in a BCC cell, we have:
Therefore, the total number of atoms present per unit cell = 2 atoms.
Question:
Lithium metal crystallizes in a body centered cubic crystal. If the length of the side of the unit cell of lithium is 351pm, the atomic radius of the lithium will be
Solution:
In case of body centered cubic (BCC) crystal,
\(\beginHence, atomic radius of lithium
\(\beginAn FCC unit cell contains atoms at all the corners of the crystal lattice and at the centre of all the faces of the cube. The atom present at the face-centered is shared between 2 adjacent unit cells and only 1/2 of each atom belongs to an individual cell.
The diagram shown below is an open structure.
a) 8 corners × 1/8 per corner atom = 8 × 1/8 = 1 atom
b) 6 face-centered atoms × 1/2 atom per unit cell = 3 atoms
Hence, the total number of atoms in a unit cell = 4 atoms
Thus, in a face-centred cubic unit cell, we have:
Therefore, the total number of atoms in a unit cell = 4 atoms.
A unit cell is the smallest representation of an entire crystal. The hexagonal closest packed (HCP) has a coordination number of 12 and contains 6 atoms per unit cell. The face-centered cubic (FCC) has a coordination number of 12 and contains 4 atoms per unit cell.
Volume = area of base × height