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Twin obliquity

  • Page ID
    19619
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    The concept of obliquity was introduced by Friedel in 1920 as a measure of the overlap of the lattices on the individuals forming a twin.

    Let us indicate with [u ' v ' w '] the direction exactly perpendicular to a twin plane (hkl), and with (h' k ' l ') the plane perpendicular to a twin axis [uvw]. [u ' v ' w '] is parallel to the reciprocal lattice vector [hkl]* and (h ' k ' l ') is parallel to the reciprocal lattice plane (uvw)*. The angle between [uvw] and [u ' v ' w '] or, which is the same, between (hkl) and (h ' k ' l '), is called the obliquity ω.

    The vector in direct space [uvw] has length L(uvw); the reciprocal lattice vector [hkl]* has length L*(hkl). The obliquity ω is thus the angle between the vectors [uvw] and [hkl]*; the scalar product between these two vectors is

    L(uvw) L*(hkl) cosω = <uvw|hkl> = uh + vk + wl

    where <| stands for a 1x3 row matrix and |> for a 3x1 column matrix.

    It follows that

    cosω = (uh + vk + wl)/L(uvw)L*(hkl)

    where L(uvw) = <uvw|G|uvw>1/2 and L*(hkl) = <hkl|G*|hkl>1/2, G and G* being the metric tensors in direct and reciprocal space, respectively.

    Notice that G* = G-1 (and thus G = G*-1) and that the matrix representation of the metric tensor is symmetric and coincides thus with its transpose (G = GT, G* = G*T).


    Twin obliquity is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Online Dictionary of Crystallography.

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