Science, asked by dakshrajput8191, 1 year ago

Difference between conventional unit cell and primitive unit cell

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Answered by kashish123456
2

A definition of a conventional unit cell of a lattice is one that contains the same point group symmetries as the overall lattice and is the smallest such cell.



Primitive unit cells contain only one lattice point, which is made up from the lattice points at each of the corners. Non-primitive unit cells contain additional lattice points, either on a face of the unit cell or within the unit cell, and so have more than one lattice point per unit cell.
Answered by Anonymous
2

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A definition of a conventional unit cell of a lattice is one that contains the same point group symmetries as the overall lattice and is the smallest such cell. Primitive unit cells contain only one lattice point, which is made up from the lattice points at each of the corners

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