Why are the holes called
octahedral ? Because each hole occupied by a lithium atom is surrounded by six chorine atoms
at the vertices of an
¶octahedron. Let's draw these atoms
as small spheres to emphasise instead the "co-ordination polyhedrae". Such geometrical
concepts are very popular with crystallographers since they help us understand the co-ordination
of atoms (their nearest neighbours) in more complex structures, as we shall see.
Common salt or sodium chloride (NaCl) is actually a little more democratic than brother lithium chloride.
The sodium atoms are bigger and can exert more influence than can the tiny lithiums.
The structure of
¶sodium chloride should then be regarded as a
cubic packing of almost equal spheres. But in practice these democratic considerations do not
change the actual structure; sodium ends up in the same position as poor lithium !
As well as octahedral holes in the CCP structure, there are also tetrahedral holes. In
structures such as that of the zinc sulphide (ZnS) mineral
¶zinc-blende the Zn atom prefers to occupy these tetrahedral holes, where it is surrounded
by only four S-atoms. Note that only half of the tetrahedral holes are occupied in ZnS, where-as
all of the octahedral holes are occupied in NaCl.
Again it is possible to draw the
¶co-ordination polyhedrae around zinc, but in this case it may be better to emphasise
the actual bonds between the Zn and S atoms, using a so called
¶ball-and-stick model. As well as CCP cubic close packing ABCABC.. of the large anions as in zinc blende,
we might alternatively expect to find HCP hexagonal close packing ABAB.. in some similar materials.
HCP
packing of oxygen anions (red) produces the
¶ZnO wurtzite structure
of zinc oxide. Notice that the co-ordination of Zn is still tetrahedral. Because there is
little energy difference between the two types of structures, we can have more complex
packing arrangements such as ABC.AB.ABC... which results in a whole series of polytype structures.
The anti-fluorite Li2S structure (not shown), like zinc-blende ZnS, consists of cubic close packed anions S,
but now all of the tetrahedral holes are occupied - by small Li cations. When the
cations are larger, such as those of calcium, the more common
¶CaF2 fluorite
structure (shown opposite) is favoured, with the sites of the cations (blue) and anions (yellow) interchanged. The
fluorite structure is favoured when the cations are so big that they need eight
anions to cover them.
The
¶TiO2 rutile or cassiterite (SnO2) structure is adopted
by quadri-valent metals or di-valent metal fluorides, such as MnF2. Here the blue
Ti cations are in octahedral holes between the red oxygen anions, which is readily seen when we draw
their co-ordination octahedrae.
Actually, the cation-anion
distances are not all quite equal, two being a little longer than the other four.
The
¶SnO2 cassiterite co-ordination octahedrae are then
slightly stretched along one axis. Such elongated octahedrae are relatively common
for di-valent and quadri-valent cations.
Returning to zinc-blende, we note that this tetrahedrally coordinated
FCC structure takes a particularly simple form when there is only one kind of atom -
it is the structure adopted by two of the most common elements, silicon and carbon, and is
known as the
¶diamond structure (more later).
Many mineral structures are based on variations of the diamond or silicon structure.
For example, if we replace the silicon atoms (Si) by silicon oxide units (SiO4) they pack together in
a similar way to form the mineral
¶cristobalite SiO2. We see that the SiO4 units are tetrahedrae, and
that these tetrahedrae are connected by all corners in cristobalite to form a relatively
dense silica structure (more later).
But what happens when the second atoms are too small for the holes between the larger atoms ?
And what happens when we have more than two kinds of atoms ? Let's look at one of the most
common and most important mineral structures, that of
perovskite.