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A6 - Frank and Kasper coordination polyhedra

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 January 2010

Jean-François Sadoc
Affiliation:
Université de Paris XI
Rémy Mosseri
Affiliation:
Université de Paris VII (Denis Diderot)
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Summary

Frank and Kasper polyhedra

One can always, in an unambiguous way, divide up a structure, made of points, into (usually irregular) tetrahedra. This is done using first the Voronoi (or Dirichlet) decomposition of space into individual cells which contain the regions of space, closer to a given point than to any other one. In generic cases, the Voronoi cells have three faces sharing a vertex of the cell. Then, connecting the original points of the set whenever their associated Voronoi cells share a face, defines a unique decomposition of the space into tetrahedra. This simplicial decomposition is equivalent, in three dimensions, to a point set triangulation in two dimensions. This procedure also provides the best way to define the coordination number in dense structure: it is the number of faces of the Voronoi cell. In a topological sense the Voronoi cell and the coordination polyhedra are dual. In a tetrahedral division of space, the set of vertices closest to a given site form its first coordination shell, which is a triangulated polyhedron (a deltahedron).

Let us introduce now a standard notation for a site coordination in a tetrahedrally close-packed structure. If the tetrahedra are not too distorted, we can only find situations where either five or six tetrahedra share a given edge. This is the case considered by Frank and Kasper (1958), who then proposed the following notation: a site such that its first neighbour shell is an icosahedron (allowing for small distortions) is called a Z12 site.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1999

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