Miller index
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Planes with
different Miller indices in cubic crystals
Examples of
directions
In particular, a
family of lattice planes is determined by three integers h, k, and ℓ, the Miller indices. They are
written (hkℓ), and each index denotes a plane orthogonal to a direction (h, k,
ℓ) in the basis of the reciprocal
lattice vectors. By
convention, negative
integers are written with
a bar, as in 3 for −3. The integers are usually written in lowest terms,
i.e. their greatest
common divisor should
be 1. Miller index 100 represents a plane orthogonal to direction h;
index 010 represents a plane orthogonal to direction k, and index
001 represents a plane orthogonal to ℓ.
There are also
several related notations:[1]
- the notation {hkℓ} denotes the set of all planes that are equivalent to (hkℓ) by the symmetry of the lattice.
In the context of
crystal directions (not planes), the corresponding notations are:
- [hkℓ], with square instead of round brackets, denotes a direction in the basis of the direct lattice vectors instead of the reciprocal lattice; and
- similarly, the notation
denotes the set of all directions that are equivalent to [hkℓ] by symmetry.
Miller indices
were introduced in 1839 by the British mineralogist William
Hallowes Miller. The
method was also historically known as the Millerian system, and the indices as
Millerian,[2] although this is now rare.
The Miller
indices are defined with respect to any choice of unit cell and not only with
respect to primitive basis vectors, as is sometimes stated.
Contents
- 1 Definition
- 2 Case of cubic structures
- 3 Case of hexagonal and rhombohedral structures
- 4 The crystallographic planes and directions
- 5 Integer vs. irrational Miller indices: Lattice planes and quasicrystals
- 6 See also
- 7 References
- 8 External links
Definition
Examples of determining
indices for a plane using intercepts with axes; left (111), right (221)
There are two
equivalent ways to define the meaning of the Miller indices:[1] via a point in the reciprocal
lattice, or as the
inverse intercepts along the lattice vectors. Both definitions are given below.
In either case, one needs to choose the three lattice vectors a1,
a2, and a3 that define the unit cell (note
that the conventional unit cell may be larger than the primitive cell of the Bravais lattice, as the examples below illustrate). Given these, the three
primitive reciprocal
lattice vectors are also
determined (denoted b1, b2, and b3).
Then, given the
three Miller indices h, k, ℓ, (hkℓ) denotes planes orthogonal to the reciprocal
lattice vector:

That is, (hkℓ)
simply indicates a normal to the planes in the basis of the primitive reciprocal lattice
vectors. Because the coordinates are integers, this normal is itself always a
reciprocal lattice vector. The requirement of lowest terms means that it is the
shortest reciprocal lattice vector in the given direction.
Equivalently,
(hkℓ) denotes a plane that intercepts the three points a1/h, a2/k,
and a3/ℓ, or some multiple thereof. That is, the Miller
indices are proportional to the inverses of the intercepts of the plane,
in the basis of the lattice vectors. If one of the indices is zero, it means
that the planes do not intersect that axis (the intercept is "at
infinity").
Considering only
(hkℓ) planes intersecting one or more lattice points (the lattice planes),
the perpendicular distance d between adjacent lattice planes is related
to the (shortest) reciprocal lattice vector orthogonal to the planes by the
formula:
.[1]

The related
notation [hkℓ] denotes the direction:

That is, it uses
the direct lattice basis instead of the reciprocal lattice. Note that [hkℓ] is not
generally normal to the (hkℓ) planes, except in a cubic lattice as described
below.
Case of cubic
structures
For the special
case of simple cubic crystals, the lattice vectors are orthogonal and of equal
length (usually denoted a); similar to the reciprocal lattice. Thus, in
this common case, the Miller indices (hkℓ) and [hkℓ] both simply denote
normals/directions in Cartesian
coordinates.
For cubic
crystals with lattice
constant a, the
spacing d between adjacent (hkℓ) lattice planes is (from above):

Because of the
symmetry of cubic crystals, it is possible to change the place and sign of the
integers and have equivalent directions and planes:
- Coordinates in angle brackets such as ⟨100⟩ denote a family of directions which are equivalent due to symmetry operations, such as [100], [010], [001] or the negative of any of those directions.
- Coordinates in curly brackets or braces such as {100} denote a family of plane normals which are equivalent due to symmetry operations, much the way angle brackets denote a family of directions.
For face-centered
cubic and body-centered
cubic lattices, the
primitive lattice vectors are not orthogonal. However, in these cases the
Miller indices are conventionally defined relative to the lattice vectors of
the cubic supercell and hence are again simply the Cartesian
directions.
Case of
hexagonal and rhombohedral structures
Miller-Bravais
indices
With hexagonal and rhombohedral lattice systems, it is possible to use the Bravais-Miller index
which has 4 numbers (h k i ℓ)
i = −(h + k).
Here h, k
and ℓ are identical to the Miller index, and i is a redundant
index.
This four-index
scheme for labeling planes in a hexagonal lattice makes permutation symmetries
apparent. For example, the similarity between (110) ≡ (1120) and (120) ≡ (1210)
is more obvious when the redundant index is shown.
In the figure at
right, the (001) plane has a 3-fold symmetry: it remains unchanged by a
rotation of 1/3 (2π/3 rad, 120°). The [100], [010] and the [110] directions are
really similar. If S is the intercept of the plane with the [110] axis,
then
i = 1/S.
There are also ad hoc schemes (e.g. in the transmission electron microscopy literature) for indexing hexagonal lattice vectors (rather than
reciprocal lattice vectors or planes) with four indices. However they don't
operate by similarly adding a redundant index to the regular three-index set.
For example, the
reciprocal lattice vector (hkℓ) as suggested above can be written as ha*+kb*+ℓc*if
the reciprocal-lattice basis-vectors are a*, b*, and c*.
For hexagonal crystals this may be expressed in terms of direct-lattice
basis-vectors a, b and c as

Hence zone
indices of the direction perpendicular to plane (hkℓ) are, in suitably
normalized triplet form, simply [2h+k,h+2k,ℓ(3/2)(a/c)2]. When four
indices are used for the zone normal to plane (hkℓ), however, the
literature often uses [h,k,-h-k,ℓ(3/2)(a/c)2] instead.[3] Thus as you can see, four-index zone indices in
square or angle brackets sometimes mix a single direct-lattice index on the
right with reciprocal-lattice indices (normally in round or curly brackets) on
the left.
The
crystallographic planes and directions
Dense
crystallographic planes
The
crystallographic directions are fictitious lines linking nodes (atoms, ions or molecules) of a crystal. Similarly, the crystallographic planes are fictitious planes linking
nodes. Some directions and planes have a higher density of nodes; these dense
planes have an influence on the behaviour of the crystal:
- optical properties: in condensed matter, the light "jumps" from one atom to the other with the Rayleigh scattering; the velocity of light thus varies according to the directions, whether the atoms are close or far; this gives the birefringence
- adsorption and reactivity: the adsorption and the chemical reactions occur on atoms or molecules, these phenomena are thus sensitive to the density of nodes;
- surface tension: the condensation of a material means that the atoms, ions or molecules are more stable if they are surrounded by other similar species; the surface tension of an interface thus varies according to the density on the surface
- the pores and crystallites tend to have straight grain boundaries following dense planes
- cleavage
- dislocations (plastic deformation)
- the dislocation core tends to spread on dense planes (the elastic perturbation is "diluted"); this reduces the friction (Peierls–Nabarro force), the sliding occurs more frequently on dense planes;
- the perturbation carried by the dislocation (Burgers vector) is along a dense direction: the shift of one node in a dense direction is a lesser distortion;
- the dislocation line tends to follow a dense direction, the dislocation line is often a straight line, a dislocation loop is often a polygon.
For all these
reasons, it is important to determine the planes and thus to have a notation
system.
Integer vs.
irrational Miller indices: Lattice planes and quasicrystals
Ordinarily,
Miller indices are always integers by definition, and this constraint is
physically significant. To understand this, suppose that we allow a plane (abc)
where the Miller "indices" a, b and c (defined
as above) are not necessarily integers.
If a, b
and c have rational ratios, then the same family of planes
can be written in terms of integer indices (hkℓ) by scaling a, b
and c appropriately: divide by the largest of the three numbers, and
then multiply by the least
common denominator. Thus,
integer Miller indices implicitly include indices with all rational ratios. The
reason why planes where the components (in the reciprocal-lattice basis) have
rational ratios are of special interest is that these are the lattice planes: they are the only planes whose intersections
with the crystal are 2d-periodic.
For a plane (abc)
where a, b and c have irrational ratios, on the other hand, the intersection of
the plane with the crystal is not periodic. It forms an aperiodic
pattern known as a quasicrystal. This construction corresponds precisely
to the standard "cut-and-project" method of defining a quasicrystal,
using a plane with irrational-ratio Miller indices. (Although many
quasicrystals, such as the Penrose tiling, are formed by "cuts" of periodic
lattices in more than three dimensions, involving the intersection of more than
one such hyperplane.)
See also
References
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Neil W. Ashcroft and N. David Mermin, Solid State Physics (Harcourt: New York, 1976)
- Jump up ^ Oxford English Dictionary Online (Consulted May 2007)
- Jump up ^ J. W. Edington (1976) Practical electron microscopy in materials science (N. V. Philips' Gloeilampenfabrieken, Eindhoven) ISBN 1-878907-35-2, Appendix 2
External links
- Miller index description with diagrams
- Online tutorial about lattice planes and Miller indices.
- MTEX – Free MATLAB toolbox for Texture Analysis
- http://sourceforge.net/projects/orilib – A collection of routines for rotation / orientation manipulation, including special tools for crystal orientations.
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