Arc L3
Arc L3
Materials
Determine the miller indices of the directions between the following points.
1. (½,1,0) (0,0,1). [122]
2. (0,0,0) (1,1,1). [111]
3. (1,0,0) (0,1,0). [110]
4. (1,½,1) (½½½). [101]
5. (1,1,1) (0,½,0). [212]
Crystallographic Planes
1. Identify the points at which the plane intercepts the x, y, z coordinates
in terms of lattice parameters. If the plane is passing through the
origin, origin of the unit cell must be moved.
2. Take reciprocals of these intercepts.
3. Clear fractions but do not reduce to lowest integers.
4. Enclose the resulting numbers in parenthesis ( ). Negative numbers
should be written with a bar over the number.
A Intercepts are x = 1, y = 1, z = 1
Reciprocals: 1, 1, 1. So the plane is (111)
B Intercepts are x = 1, y = 2, z = .
Reciprocals: 1, ½, 0.
Clear fraction: 2 1 0, So the plane is (210)
(111) (210)
Some General Principles
The smaller a Miller index, the more nearly parallel the plane
is to the axis.
1. Planes and their negatives are identical (this was not the case for
directions)
2. Planes and their multiples are not identical (opposite for direction). It
means (100) and (200) are not same.
3. In each unit cell, planes of a form represent groups of equivalent
planes that have their particular indices because of the orientation of
the coordinates. This groups of similar planes are represented with
the notation .
4. In cubic systems, a direction that has the same indices as a plane is
perpendicular to that plane.
[u′v′w′] [uvtw]
u = 1/3(2u′ – v′)
v = 1/3(2v′ – u′)
t = - (u + v)
w = w′
Miller-Bravais system
Coordinate system of hexagonal lattice Directions
and Planes