Crystal Structure and Dynamics - University of Oxford Department of
Transcription
Crystal Structure and Dynamics - University of Oxford Department of
Crystal Structure and Dynamics Paolo G. Radaelli, Michaelmas Term 2013 Part 1: Symmetry in the solid state Lectures 1-4 Web Site: http://www2.physics.ox.ac.uk/students/course-materials/c3-condensed-matter-major-option Bibliography ◦ C. Hammond The Basics of Crystallography and Diffraction, Oxford University Press (from Blackwells). A well-established textbook for crystallography and diffraction. ◦ Paolo G. Radaelli, Symmetry in Crystallography: Understanding the International Tables , Oxford University Press (2011). Contains much of the same materials covering lectures 1-3, but in an extended form. ◦ T. Hahn, ed., International tables for crystallography, vol. A (Kluver Academic Publisher, Dodrecht: Holland/Boston: USA/ London: UK, 2002), 5th ed. The International Tables for Crystallography are an indispensable text for any condensed-matter physicist. It currently consists of 8 volumes. A selection of pages is provided on the web site. Additional sample pages can be found on http://www.iucr.org/books/international-tables. ◦ C. Giacovazzo, H.L. Monaco, D. Viterbo, F. Scordari, G. Gilli, G. Zanotti and M. Catti, Fundamentals of crystallography (International Union of Crystallography, Oxford University Press Inc., New York) ◦ ”Visions of Symmetry: Notebooks, Periodic Drawings, and Related Work of M. C. Escher”, W.H.Freeman and Company, 1990. A collection of symmetry drawings by M.C. Escher, also to be found here: http://www.mcescher.com/Gallery/gallery-symmetry.htm ◦ Neil W. Ashcroft and N. David Mermin, Solid State Physics, HRW International Editions, CBS Publishing Asia Ltd (1976) is now a rather old book, but, sadly, it is probably still the best solid-state physics book around. It is a graduate-level book, but it is accessible to the interested undergraduate. 1 Contents 1 Lecture 1 — Symmetry of simple patterns 1.1 Introduction to group theory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.2 Symmetry of periodic patterns in 2 dimensions: 2D point groups and wallpaper groups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.3 Combinations of rotations and translations — normal form of symmetry operators 2 Lecture 2 — Coordinates and calculations 2.1 Crystallographic coordinates . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2 Distances and angles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.3 Dual basis and coordinates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.4 Dual basis in 3D . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5 Dot products in reciprocal space . . . . . . . . . . . 2.6 A very useful example: the hexagonal system in 2D 2.7 Symmetry in 3 dimensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 3 5 9 . . . . . . . 12 12 13 14 15 15 16 16 3 Lecture 3 — Fourier transform of periodic functions 3.1 Centring extinctions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2 Fourier transform of lattice functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.3 The symmetry of |F (q)|2 and the Laue classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 22 23 24 4 Lecture 4 — Brillouin zones and the symmetry of the band structure 4.1 Symmetry of the electronic band structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.2 Symmetry properties of the group velocity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.2.1 The oblique lattice in 2D: a low symmetry case . . . . . . . . . . 4.2.2 The square lattice: a high symmetry case . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.3 Symmetry in the nearly-free electron model: degenerate wavefunctions 26 27 29 30 31 31 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 1.1 Lecture 1 — Symmetry of simple patterns Introduction to group theory • Previous courses have already illustrated the important of translational symmetry (lattice periodicity), especially in the context of the Bloch theorem. Here, we will extend this by illustrating the important of rotational symmetry: • Knowing the full crystal symmetry (translation + rotation) allows a simplified description of the crystal structure and calculations of its properties (in terms of fewer unique atoms). Diffraction experiments can help to identify the crystal symmetry (albeit not uniquely). Symmetry applies to continuous functions (e.g., electron density in a crystal) as well as to collections of discrete objects (atoms). The crystal symmetry generates a corresponding symmetry of the dispersion relations (phonons, electrons) in reciprocal space. In the spirit of describing real experiments, this means that smaller regions of the reciprocal space need to be measured (a quadrant, an octant etc.) to reconstruct the whole dispersion. Symmetry also restricts, for example, certain components of the group velocity. • In describing the symmetry of isolated objects or periodic systems, one defines operations (or operators) that describe transformations of the pattern. We create the new pattern from the old pattern by associating a point p2 to each point p1 and transferring the “attributes” of p1 to p2. This transformation preserves distances and angles, and is in essence a combination of translations, reflections and rotations. If the transformation is a symmetry operator, the old and new patterns are indistinguishable. • Symmetry operators can be applied one after the other, generating new operators. Taken all together they form a finite (for pure rotations/reflections) or infinite (if one includes translations) consistent set. • The set of operators describing the symmetry of an object or pattern conforms to the mathematical structure of a group. We will only deal with sets of operators, not with the more abstract mathematical concept of group. A group is a set of elements with a defined binary operation known as composition, which obeys certain rules. 3 A binary operation (usually called composition or multiplication) must be defined. We indicated this with the symbol “◦”. When group elements are operators, the operator to the right is applied first. Composition must be associative: for every three elements f , g and h of the set f ◦ (g ◦ h) = (f ◦ g) ◦ h (1) The “neutral element” (i.e., the identity, usually indicated with E) must exist, so that for every element g: g◦E =E◦g =g (2) Each element g has an inverse element g −1 so that g ◦ g −1 = g −1 ◦ g = E (3) A subgroup is a subset of a group that is also a group. A set of generators is a subset of the group (not usually a subgroup) that can generate the whole group by composition. Infinite groups (e.g., the set of all lattice translations) can have a finite set of generators (the primitive translations). • Composition of two symmetry operators is the application of these one after another. we can see that the rules above hold. • Composition is not commutative (fig. 1). • Graphs or symmetry elements are sets of invariant points of a pattern under one or more symmetry operators. • Sets of symmetry-related graphs form a class. In group theory, they correspond to classes of symmetry operators, defined as follows: two symmetry operators belong to the same class when they are conjugated. h0 is conjugated with h if there is a g ∈ G so that: h0 = g ◦ h ◦ g −1 (4) • Conjugation of graphs defines set of equivalent points with special properties. Wychoff letters are used to label these points. 4 m10◦4+ 4+◦m10 m11 4+ 4+ 45º m10 m10 45º m11 Figure 1: Left: A graphical illustration of the composition of the operators 4+ and m10 to give 4+ ◦ m10 = m11 . The fragment to be transformed (here a dot) is indicated with ”start”, and the two operators are applied in order one after the other, until one reaches the ”end” position. Right: 4+ and m10 do not commute: m10 ◦ 4+ = m1̄1 6= m11 . Another symmetry element or graph, related to the other mirror plane by 4-‐fold rota5on. Belongs to the same class. Symmetry element or graph: mirror plane. A set of invariant points under the symmetry operator Symmetry operator: transforms one part of the pa.ern into another (in this case by reflec5on) Figure 2: Symmetry operators and symmetry elements (graphs). A symmetry operator is the point by point transformation of one part of the pattern into another (arrow). In the language of coordinates, the attributes of point x(1), y(1), z(1), e.g., colour, texture etc., will be transferred to point x(2), y(2), z(2). Symmetry elements (shown by lines) are points left invariant by a given set of transformations. 1.2 Symmetry of periodic patterns in 2 dimensions: 2D point groups and wallpaper groups • Point groups are finite groups of rotations/reflections around a fixed point. There is an infinite number finite point groups in 2D and above. Examples are groups or rotations about an axis by angles that are rational fractions of 2π. • However, only a small number of these groups are relevant for crystallog5 Figure 3: Left. A showflake by by Vermont scientist-artist Wilson Bentley, c. 1902. Right The symmetry group of the snowflake, 6mm in the ITC notation. The group has 6 classes, 5 marked on the drawing plus the identity operator E. Note that there are two classes of mirror planes, marked “1” and “2” on the drawing. One can see on the snowflake picture that their graphs contain different patterns. Table 1: The 17 wallpaper groups. The symbols are obtained by combining the 5 Bravais lattices with the 10 2D point groups, and replacing g with m systematically. Strikeout symbols are duplicate of other symbols. crystal system crystal class wallpaper groups 1 p1 oblique 2 p2 m pm, cm,pg, cg rectangular 2mm p2mm, p2mg (=p2gm), p2gg, c2mm, c2mg, c2gg 4 p4 square 4mm p4mm, p4gm, p4mg 3 p3 hexagonal 3m1-31m p3m1, p3mg, p31m, p31g 6 p6 6mm p6mm, p6mg, p6gm, p6gg raphy, since all others are incompatible with a lattice. There are 10 crystallographic point groups in 2D and 32 in 3D (see web site for a complete list of crystallographic point groups and their properties from the ITC)1 . • Periodic patterns are invariant by a set of translations, which also form a group. They may also be invariant by rotations/reflections and combi1 A very interesting set of “sub-periodic” groups is represented by the so-called frieze groups, which describe the symmetry of a repeated pattern in 1 dimension. There are only 7 frieze groups, which are very simple to understand given the small number of operators involved. For a description of the frieze groups, with some nice pictorial example, see the Supplementary Material. 6 Equivalent points for general posi+on (here 12 c) Primary symmetry direc+on Graph representa+on Secondary symmetry direc+on Ter+ary symmetry direc+on Site symmetry Wychoff le8er Site mul+plicity Figure 4: An explanation of the most important symbol in the Point Groups subsection of the International Tables for Crystallography. All the 11 2D point group entries are reproduced in the long version of the notes (se web site, Lecture 1). The graphical symbols are described in fig. 9. Note that primary, secondary and tertiary symmetries never belong to the same class. nations of translations/rotations. • Lattice is an alternative (and visual) concept to the translation set. • Unit cells are parts of the pattern that reproduce the whole pattern by translation. • There is a variety of ways to choose primitive (=smallest possible) unit cells. The most convenient choice is the most symmetric one. • In 2D, there are 5 types of lattices: oblique, p-rectangular, c-rectangular, square and hexagonal (see Fig. 5). • In the c-rectangular lattice, no primitive cell has the full symmetry of the lattice. It is convenient to adopt a non-primitive centred cell. • The origin of the unit cell is to a large extent arbitrary. It is convenient to choose it to coincide with a symmetry element. 7 Oblique c p Rectangular Square Hexagonal Figure 5: The 5 Bravails lattices in 2 dimensions. • Although there are an infinite number of symmetry operators (and symmetry elements), it is sufficient to consider elements in a single unit cell. • Glides. This is a composite symmetry, which combines a translation with a parallel reflection, neither of which on its own is a symmetry operator. In 2D groups, the glide is indicated with the symbol g. Twice a glide translation is always a symmetry translation: in fact, if one applies the glide operator twice as in g ◦ g, one obtains a pure translation (since the two mirrors cancel out), which therefore must be a symmetry translation. • Walpaper groups. The 17 Plane (or Wallpaper) groups describe the symmetry of all periodic 2D patterns (see tab. 1). The decision three in fig. 6 can be used to identify wallpaper groups. 2 2 For a more complete description of wallpaper groups and of the symmetry of the underlying 2D lattices, see the Supplementary Material. 8 1 4 6 3 2 Axis of highest order Has mirrors? Has mirrors? Has mirrors? Has mirrors? p6 p6mm p4 Has mirrors? Has glides? All axes on mirrors? Axes on mirrors? p3 p3m1 p31m p4gm p4mm Has glides? p2mg p1 Has rotations off mirros? p2gg p2 Has orthogonal mirrors? pg Has glides? cm pm c2mm p2mm Figure 6: Decision-making tree to identify wallpaper patterns. The first step (bottom) is to identify the axis of highest order. Continuous and dotted lines are ”Yes” and ”No” branches, respectively. Diamonds are branching points. 1.3 Combinations of rotations and translations — normal form of symmetry operators • Our aim here is to show that all symmetry operators can be written as the composition of a rotation (first) followed by a translation second. We will do this by employing Cartesian coordinates (we will generalise to 9 the 3D case). • We have so far seen two combinations or rotations and translations: Glides are an example of roto-translations. In Cartesian coordinates, roto-translations can be written as: x(2) x(1) tx y(2) = R y(1) + ty z(2) z(1) tz (5) where R is a proper (det=1) or improper (det=-1) rotation (orthogonal) matrix and t is the glide vector. for example, a glide perpendicular to the x axis and with glide vector along the y axis will produce the following transformation: −x(1) x(2) y(2) = y(1) + 1/2 z(1) z(2) (6) Operators with graphs that do not cross the origin (however it is chosen). We show now that these operators can be written in the same form. If the operator graph goes through the point x0 , y0 , z0 , the general form of such operator in Cartesian coordinates is x(2) x(1) − x0 x0 y(2) = R y(1) − y0 + y0 z(2) z(1) − z0 z0 x(2) x(1) tx = y(2) = R y(1) + ty z(2) z(1) tz (7) where tx x0 x0 ty = y0 − R y0 tz z0 z0 (8) for example, a mirror plane perpendicular to the x axis and located at x = 1/4 will produce the following transformation: x(2) −x(1) + 1/2 y(2) = y(1) z(2) z(1) 10 (9) • Symmetry operators written in the form of eq. 5 are said to be in normal form. They are written as the composition (in this order) of a rotation (proper or improper) — the rotational part, followed by a translation — the translational part. • Note that when using non-Cartesian coordinates (see next lesson), the normal form of symmetry operators remains the same: x(2) x(1) tx y(2) = D y(1) + ty z(2) z(1) tz (10) In general, D is not orthogonal, but its determinant is still ±1. • It can be easily shown that the rotational part of g ◦ f is R g R f . Therefore, the rotational parts of the operators of a wallpaper group (and a space group late on) form themselves a group, which is clearly one of the 11 point groups in 2D. This is called the crystal class of the wallpaper group. 11 2 2.1 Lecture 2 — Coordinates and calculations Crystallographic coordinates • In crystallography, we do not usually employ Cartesian coordinates. Instead, we employ coordinate systems with basis vectors coinciding with either primitive or conventional translation operators. • When primitive translations are used as basis vectors points of the pattern related by translation will differ by integral values of x,y and z. • When conventional translations are used as basis vectors, {points of the pattern related by translation will differ by either integral or simple fractional (either n/2 or n/3) values of x,y and z. • Basis vectors have the dimension of a length, and coordinates (position vector components) are dimensionless. • We will denote the basis vectors as ai , where the correspondence with the usual crystallographic notation is a1 = a; a2 = b; a3 = c (11) • We will sometimes employ explicit array and matrix multiplication for clarity. In this case, the array of basis vectors is written as a row, as in [a] = [a1 a2 a3 ]. • Components of a generic vector v will be denoted as v i , where v 1 = vx ; v 2 = vy ; v 3 = vz ; (12) v1 • Components will be expressed using column arrays, as in [v] = v 2 v3 • A vector is then written as v= X ai v i = a1 v 1 + a2 v 2 + a3 v 3 (13) i • A position vector is written as r= X ai xi = ax + by + cz i 12 (14) 2.2 Distances and angles • The dot product between two position vectors is given explicitly by r1 · r2 = a · a x1 x2 + b · b x1 x2 + c · c z1 z2 + +a · b [x1 y2 + y1 x2 ] + a · c [x1 z2 + z1 x2 ] + b · c [y1 z2 + z1 y2 ] = = a2 x1 x2 + b2 x1 x2 + c2 z1 z2 + ab cos γ [x1 y2 + y1 x2 ] +ac cos β [x1 z2 + z1 x2 ] + bc cos α [y1 z2 + z1 y2 ] (15) • More generically, the dot product between two vectors is written as v·u= X i ai v i · X aj v j = j X [ai · aj ] ui v j (16) i,j • The quantities in square bracket represent the elements of a symmetric matrix, known as the metric tensor. The metric tensor elements have the dimensions of length square. Gij = ai · aj (17) Calculating lengths and angles using the metric tensor • You are generally given the lattice parameters a, b, c, α, β and γ. In terms of these, the metric tensor can be written as a2 ab cos γ ac cos β b2 bc cos α G = ab cos γ ac cos β bc cos α c2 (18) • To measure the length v of a vector v: v1 v 3 ]G v 2 v3 v 2 = |v|2 = [ v 1 v 2 (19) • To measure the angle θ between two vectors v and u: 1 v 1 cos θ = [ u1 u2 u3 ]G v 2 uv v3 13 (20) 2.3 Dual basis and coordinates • Let us assume a basis vector set ai for our vector space as before, and let us consider the following set of new vectors. bi = 2π X ak (G−1 )ki (21) k From Eq. 17 follows: ai · bj = ai · 2π X ak (G−1 )ki = 2π X k Gik (G−1 )kj = 2πδij (22) k • Note that the vectors bi have dimensions length−1 . Since the bi are linearly independent if the ai are, one can use them as new basis vectors, forming the so-called dual basis. This being a perfectly legitimate choice, can express any vector on this new basis, as q= X qi bi (23) i • We can write any vector on this new basis, but vectors expressed using dimensionless coordinates on the dual basis have dimensions length−1 , and cannot therefore be summed to the position vectors. • We can consider these vectors as representing the position vectors of a separate space, the so-called reciprocal space. • The dot product between position vectors in real and reciprocal space is a dimensionless quantity, and has an extremely simple form (eq. 24): q · v = 2π X qi xi (24) i • In particular, the dot product of integral multiples of the original basis vectors (i.e., direct or real lattice vectors), with integral multiples of the dual basis vectors (i.e., reciprocal lattice vectors) are integral multiples of 2π. This property will be used extensively to calculate Fourier transforms of lattice functions. 14 Recap of the key formulas for the dual basis • From direct to dual bases (eq. 21) bi = 2π X ak (G−1 )ki k • Dot product relation between the two bases (eq. 22) ai · bj = 2πδij • Dot product between vectors expressed on the two different bases (eq. 24) q · v = 2π X qi xi i 2.4 Dual basis in 3D • In 3 dimensions, there is a very useful formula to calculate the dual basis vectors, which makes use of the properties of the vector product: a2 × a3 a1 · (a2 × a3 ) a3 × a1 = 2π a1 · (a2 × a3 ) a1 × a2 = 2π a1 · (a2 × a3 ) b1 = 2π b2 b3 (25) Note that v = a1 ·(a2 × a3 ) = abc 1 − cos2 α − cos2 β − cos2 γ + 2 cos α cos β cos γ 1/2 (26) is the unit cell volume. • In crystallographic textbooks, the dual basis vectors are often written as a∗ , b∗ and c∗ . 2.5 Dot products in reciprocal space • As we shall see later, it is very useful to calculate the dot product between two vectors in reciprocal space. This can be tricky in non-Cartesian coordinate systems. 15 • A quick way to do this is to determine the reciprocal-space metric tensor, which is related to the real-space one. • The reciprocal-space metric tensor is G̃ = (2π)2 G −1 , so that, for two reciprocalspace vectors q and r: q·r= X G̃ij qi rj (27) i,j 2.6 A very useful example: the hexagonal system in 2D • The hexagonal system in 2D has a number of important applications in contemporary solid-state physics problems, particularly for carbon-based materials such as graphene and carbon nanotubes. • By crystallographic convention, the real-space basis vectors form an angle a ∧ b of 120◦ (this is also true in 3D). • The real-space metric tensor is therefore: G=a 2 1 −1/2 −1/2 1 (28) • From eq. 27, we can find the reciprocal-space metric tensor : (2π)2 4 G̃ = a2 3 1 1/2 1/2 1 (29) • It follows, for example, that the length of a vector in reciprocal space is given by: 2π q= a 2.7 r 4 2 (h + hk + k 2 ) 3 (30) Symmetry in 3 dimensions • In 3D, there is a distinction between proper and improper rotations. • All improper rotations can be obtained by composing a proper rotation with the inversion — itself an improper rotation — as I ◦ r. • In all coordinate systems, the matrix representation of the inversion (located at the origin) is minus the identity matrix. From this, it is easy to see that the inversion commutes with all operators. 16 • I ◦ 2 = m⊥ , so the mirror plane is the improper operator corresponding to a 2-fold rotation axis perpendicular to it. • There are three other significant improper operators in 3D, known as rotoinversions. They are obtained by composition of an axis r of order higher than two with the inversion, as I ◦ r. These operators are 3̄ ( 4̄ ( ) and 6̄ ( ), ), and their action is summarized in Fig. 7. The sym- bols are chosen to emphasize the existence of another operator inside the ”belly” of each new operator. Note that 3̄ ◦ 3̄ ◦ 3̄ = 3̄3 = I, and 3̄4 = 3, i.e., symmetries containing 3̄ also contain the inversion and the 3-fold rotation. Conversely, 4̄ and 6̄ do not automatically contain the inversion. In addition, symmetries containing both 4̄ (or 6̄) and I also contain 4 (or 6). + -‐ -‐ -‐ + + -‐ +/-‐ + + -‐ +/-‐ +/-‐ Figure 7: Action of the 3̄ , 4̄ and 6̄ operators and their powers. The set of equivalent points forms a trigonal antiprism, a tetragonally-distorted tetrahedron and a trigonal prism, respectively. Points marked with ”+” and ”-” are above or below the projection plane, respectively. Positions marked with ”+/-” correspond to pairs of equivalent points above and below the plane. • Glide planes in 3D have different symbols, depending on the orientation of the glide vector with respect to the plane of the projection (fig. 9). • There is also a new type of operator, resulting from the compositions of proper rotations with translation parallel to them. These are known as screw axes. • For an axis of order n, the nth power of a screw axis is a primitive translation t . Therefore, the translation component must be m n t, where m is an integer. We can limit ourselves to m < n, all the other operators being composition with lattice translations. Roto-translation axes are therefore indicated as nm , as in 21 , 63 etc. (fig. 9). 17 Figure 8: Bravais lattices in 3D. For a full explanation of their symmetry, and on convention for point/space groups in 3D, see Supplementary Material. 18 2 3 4 3 1 6 4 a,b or c m n e d 3 8 2 21 31 41 43 42 32 g m 6 1 8 62 64 61 65 63 Figure 9: The most important graph symbols employed in the International Tables to describe 3D space groups. Fraction next to the symmetry element indicate the height (z coordinate) with respect to the origin. 19 IT numbering SG symbols (Hermann-‐Mauguin nota6on) Crystal class (point group) SG symbol (Schoenflies nota6on) Crystal system SG diagrams projected along the 3 direc6ons b is orthogonal to a and c. Cell choce 1 here means that the origin is on an inversion centre. A generic posi6on and its equivalent. Dots with and without commas are related by an improper operator (molecules located here would have opposite chirality) A symmetry operator notated as follows: a 2-‐fold axis with an associated transla6on of ½ along the b=axis, i.e., a screw axis. This is located at (0,y,¼) (see SG diagrams, especially top leO). Only a subset of the symmetry operators are indicated. All others can be obtained by composi6on with transla6on operators. Asymmetric unit cell: the smallest part of the paGern that generates the whole paGern by applying all symmetry operators. Figure 10: Explanation of the most important symbols and notations in the Space Group entries in the International Tables. The example illustrated here is SG 14: P 21 /c . 20 Refers to numbering of operators on previous page Group generators Primi4ve transla4ons Equivalent posi4ons, obtained by applying the operators on the previous page (with numbering indicated). Reflects normal form of operators. 4 pairs of equivalent inversion centres, not equivalent to centres in other pairs (not in the same class). They have their own dis4nct Wickoff leEer. Reflec4on condi4ons for each class of reflec4ons. General: valid for all atoms (i.e., no h0l reflec4on will be observed unless l=2n; this is due to the c glide). Special: valid only for atoms located at corresponding posi4ons (leI side), i.e., atoms on inversion centres do not contribute unless k+l=2n Figure 11: IT entry for SG 14: P 21 /c (page 2). 21 3 3.1 Lecture 3 — Fourier transform of periodic functions Centring extinctions • Reciprocal-space vectors are described as linear combinations of the reciprocal or dual basis vectors, (dimensions: length−1 ) with dimensionless coefficients. • Reciprocal-lattice vectors (RLV ) are reciprocal space vectors with integral components. These are known as the Miller indices and are usually notated as hkl. Dot products • The dot product of real and reciprocal space vectors expressed in the usual coordinates is q · v = 2π X qi v i (31) i • The dot product of real and reciprocal lattice vectors is: - If a primitive basis is used to construct the dual basis, 2π times an integer for all q and v in the real and reciprocal lattice, respectively. In fact, as we just said, all the components are integral in this case. - If a conventional basis is used to construct the dual basis, 2π times an integer or a simple fraction of 2π. In fact the components of the centering vectors are fractional. • Therefore, if a conventional real-space basis is used to construct the dual basis, only certain reciprocal-lattice vectors will yield a 2πn dot product with all real-lattice vectors. These reciprocal-lattice vectors are exactly those generated by the corresponding primitive basis. A conventional basis generates more RL vectors that a corresponding primitive basis. As we shall see, the “extra” points are not associated with any scattering intensity — we will say that they are extinct by centering. • Each non-primitive lattice type has centring extinctions, which can be expressed in terms of the Miller indices hkl (see table 2). • The non-exctinct reciprocal lattice points also form a lattice, which is naturally one of the 14 Bravais lattices. For each real-space Bravais lattice, tab. 3 lists the corresponding RL type. 22 Table 2: Centering extinction and scattering conditions for the centered lattices. The “Extinction” columns lists the Miller indices of reflections that are extinct by centering, i.e., are “extra” RLV generated as a result of using a conventional basis instead of a primitive one. The complementary “Scattering” column corresponds to the listing in the International Tables vol. A, and lists the Miller indices of “allowed” reflections. “n” is any integer (positive or negative). Lattice type 3.2 Extinction Scattering P none all A B C k + l = 2n + 1 h + l = 2n + 1 h + k = 2n + 1 k + l = 2n h + l = 2n h + k = 2n F k + l = 2n + 1 or h + l = 2n + 1 or h + k = 2n + 1 k + l = 2n and h + l = 2n and h + k = 2n I h + k + l = 2n + 1 h + k + l = 2n R −h + k + l = 3n + 1 or −h + k + l = 3n + 2 −h + k + l = 3n Fourier transform of lattice functions • It can be shown (see supplementary material on the web site) that the Fourier transform of a function f (r) (real or complex) with the periodicity of the lattice can be written as: F (q) = 1 (2π) = X 3 2 v0 (2π) i i qi n P Z d(x)f (x)e−iq·x u.c. ni X 3 2 e −2πi e−2πi i i qi n P Z dxi f (xi )e−2πi P i qi x i (32) u.c. ni where v0 is the volume of the unit cell • The triple infinite summation in ni = nx , ny , nz is over all positive and negative integers. The qi = qx , qy , qz are reciprocal space coordinates on the dual basis. The xi = x, y, z are real-space crystallographic coordinates (this is essential to obtain the qi ni term in the exponent). The integral is over one unit cell. 23 Table 3: Reciprocal-lattice Bravais lattice for any given real-space Bravais lattice (BL). Crystal system Triclinic Real-space BL P Reciprocal-space BL P Monoclinic C C Orthorhombic P A or B or C I F P A or B or C F I Tetragonal P I P I Trigonal P R P R Hexagonal P P Cubic P I F P F I • F (q) is non-zero only for q belonging to the primitive RL. In fact, if q belongs to the primitive reciprocal lattice, then by definition its dot product to the symmetry lattice translation is a multiple of 2π, the exponential factor is 1 and the finite summation yields N (i.e., the number of unit cells). Conversely, if q does not belong to the primitive reciprocal lattice, the exponential factor will vary over the unit circle in complex number space and will always average to zero. This is true, in particular, for those “‘conventional”’ RLV that we called extinct by centring. • It is the periodic nature of f (r) that is responsible for the discrete nature of F (q). 3.3 The symmetry of |F (q)|2 and the Laue classes • It is very useful to consider the symmetry of the RL when |F (x)|2 is associated with the RL nodes. In fact, this corresponds to the symmetry of the diffraction experiment, and tells us how many unique reflections we need to measure. • Translational invariance is lost once |F (x)|2 is associated with the RL nodes. 24 • Let R be the rotational part and t the translational part of a generic symmetry operators. One can prove that F (q) = Z N (2π) 3 2 −1 d(x)f (x)e−i(R q)·x −iq·t e = F (R−1 q)e−iq·t (33) u.c. Eq. 33 shows that the reciprocal lattice weighed with |F (q)|2 has the full point-group symmetry of the crystal class. • This is because the phase factor e−iq·t clearly disappears when taking the modulus squared. In fact, there is more to this symmetry when f(x) is real, i.e., f (x) = f ∗ (x): in this case ∗ F (q) = Z N 3 (2π) 2 = Z N (2π) 3 2 dxf ∗ (x)eiq·x (34) u.c. dxf (x)eiq·x = F (−q) u.c. • Consequently, |F (q)|2 = F (q) F (−q) = |F (−q)|2 is centrosymmetric. As we shall shortly see, the lattice function used to calculate non-resonant scattering cross-sections is real. Consequently, the |F (q)|2 -weighed RL (proportional to the Bragg peak intensity) has the symmetry of the crystal class augumented by the center of symmetry. This is necessarily one of the 11 centrosymmetryc point groups, and is known as the Laue class of the crystal. Fridel’s law For normal (non-anomalous) scattering, the reciprocal lattice weighed with |F (q)|2 has the full point-group symmetry of the crystal class supplemented by the inversion. This symmetry is known as the Laue class of the space group. In particular, for normal (non-anomalous) scattering, Fridel’s law holds: |F (hkl)|2 = |F (h̄k̄¯l)|2 (35) Fridel’s law is violated for non-centrosymmetric crystals in anomalous conditions. Anomalous scattering enables one, for example, to determine the orientation of a polar crystal or the chirality of a chiral crystal in an absolute way. 25 4 Lecture 4 — Brillouin zones and the symmetry of the band structure • The electronic, vibrational and magnetic phenomena occurring in a crystal have, overall, the same symmetry of the crystal. • However, individual excitations (phonons, magnons, electrons, holes) break most of the symmetry, which is only restored because symmetry-equivalent excitations also exist and have the same energy (and therefore population) at a given temperature. • The wavevectors of these excitations are generic (non-RL) reciprocal-space vectors. • When these excitations are taken into account, one finds that inelastic scattering of light, X-rays or neutrons can occur. In general, the inelastic scattering will be outside the RL nodes. • Various Wigner Seitz constructions 3 are employed to subdivide the recip- rocal space, for the purpose of: Classifying the wavevectors of the excitations. The Bloch theorem states that “crystal” wavevectors within the first Brillouin zone (first Wigner-Seitz cell) are sufficient for this purpose. Perform scattering experiments. In general, an excitation with wavevector k (within the first Brillouin zone) will give rise to scattering at all points τ + k, where τ is a RLV . However, the observed scattering intensity at these points will be different. The repeated WignerSeitz construction is particularly useful to map the “geography” of scattering experiments. Construct Bloch wave functions (with crystal momentum within the first Brillouin zone) starting from free-electron wave-functions (with real wavevector k anywhere in reciprocal space). In particular, apply degenerate perturbation theory to free-electron wavefunctions with the same crystal wavevector. Here, the extended Wigner-Seitz construction is particularly useful, since free-electron wavefunctions within reciprocal space “fragments” belonging to the same Brillouin zone form a continuous band of excitations. • The different types of BZ constructions were already introduced last year. They are reviewed in the lecture and in the supplementary material on the web site. 3 A very good description of the Wigner-Seitz and Brillouin constructions can be found in [?]. See also the Supplementary Material for a summary of the procedure. 26 k Figure 12: A set of typical 1-dimensional electronic dispersion curves in the reduced/repeated zone scheme. 4.1 Symmetry of the electronic band structure • We will here consider the case of electronic wavefunctions, but it is important to state that almost identical considerations can be applied to other wave-like excitations in crystals, such as phonons and spin waves (magnons). • Bloch theorem: in the presence of a periodic potential, electronic wavefunctions in a crystal have the Bloch form: ψk (r) = eik·r uk (r) (36) where uk (r) has the periodicity of the crystal. We also recall that the crystal wavevector k can be limited to the first Brillouin zone (BZ). In 0 fact, a function ψk0 (r) = eik ·r uk0 (r) with k0 outside the first BZ can be rewritten as h i ψk0 (r) = eik·r eiτ ·r uk0 (r) (37) where k0 = τ +k, k is within the 1st BZ and τ is a reciprocal lattice vector (RLV ). Note that the function in square brackets has the periodicity of the crystal, so that eq. 37 is in the Bloch form. 27 • The application of the Bloch theorem to 1-dimensional (1D) electronic wavefunctions, using either the nearly-free electron approximation or the tight-binding approximation leads to the typical set of electronic dispersion curves (E vs. k relations) shown in fig. 12. We draw attention to three important features of these curves: • Properties of the electronic dispersions in 1D They are symmetrical (i.e., even) around the origin. The left and right zone boundary points differ by the RLV 2π/a, and are also related by symmetry. The slope of the dispersions is zero both at the zone centre and at the zone boundary. We recall that the slope (or more generally the gradient of the dispersion is related to the group velocity of the wavefunctions in band n by: vn (k) = 1 ∂En (k) ~ ∂k (38) • Properties of the electronic dispersions in 2D and 3D They have the full Laue (point-group) symmetry of the crystal. This applies to both energies (scalar quantities) and velocities (vector quantities) Zone edge centre (2D) or face centre (3D) points on opposite sides of the origin differ by a RLV and are also related by inversion symmetry. Otherwise, zone boundary points that are related by symmetry do not not necessarily differ by a RLV . Zone boundary points that differ by a RLV are not necessarily related by symmetry. Group velocities are zero at zone centre, edge centre (2D) or face centre (3D) points. Some components of the group velocities are (usually) zero at zone boundary points (very low-symmetry cases are an exception — see below). Group velocities directions are constrained by symmetry on symmetry elements such as mirror planes and rotation axes. • The dispersion of the band structure, En (k), has the Laue symmetry of the crystal. This is because: 28 En (k) is a macroscopic observable (it can be mapped, for example, by Angle Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy — ARPES) and any macroscopic observable property of the crystal must have at least the point-group symmetry of the crystal (Neumann’s principle — see later). If the Bloch wavefunction ψk = eik·r uk (r) is an eigenstate of the Schroedinger equation ~2 2 − ∇ + U (r) ψk = Ek ψk 2m (39) then ψk† = e−ik·r u†k (r) is a solution of the same Schroedinger equation with the same eigenvalue (this is always the case if the potential is a real function). ψk† has crystal momentum −k. Therefore, the energy dispersion surfaces (and the group velocities) must be inversion-symmetric even if the crystal is not. 4.2 Symmetry properties of the group velocity • The group velocity at two points related by inversion in the BZ must be opposite. • For points related by a mirror plane or a 2-fold axis, the components of the group velocity parallel and perpendicular to the plane or axis must be equal or opposite, respectively. • Similar constraints apply to points related by higher-order axes — in particular, the components of the group velocity parallel to the axis must be equal. • Since eik·r uk (r) = ei(k+τ )·r {e−τ ·r uk (r)} and the latter has crystal momentum k + τ , Ek must be the same at points on opposite faces across the Brillouin zone (BZ), separated by τ . • If the band dispersion Ek is smooth through the zone boundary, then the gradient of Ek (and therefore vn (k)) must be the same at points on opposite faces across the Brillouin zone (BZ), separated by τ . 4 4 This leaves the possibility open for cases in which vn (k) jumps discontinuosly across the BZ boundary and is therefore not well defined exactly at the boundary. This can only happen if bands with different symmetries cross exactly at the BZ boundary. 29 Figure 13: the first and two additional Wigner-Seitz cells on the oblique lattice (construction lines are shown). Significant points are labelled, and some possible zone-boundary group velocity vectors are plotted with arrows. 4.2.1 The oblique lattice in 2D: a low symmetry case • The point-group symmetry of this lattice is 2, and so is the Laue class of any 2D crystal with this symmetry (remember that the inversion and the 2-fold rotation coincide in 2D). • Fig. 13 shows the usual Wigner-Seitz construction on an oblique lattice. • Points on opposite zone-boundary edge centres (A-A and B-B) are related by 2-fold rotation–inversion (so their group velocities must be opposite) and are also related by a RLV (so their group velocities must be the same). Follows that at points A and B, as well as at the Γ point (which is on the centre of inversion) the group velocity is zero. • For the other points, symmetry does not lead to a cancelation of the group velocities: For example, points a1 and b1 are related by a RLV but not by inversion, so their group velocities are the same but non-zero. Similarly, points c1 and c2 are related by inversion but not by a RLV , so their group velocities are opposite but not zero. • Points a1 , a2 , b1 etc. do not have any special significance. It is therefore customary for this type of lattice (and for the related monoclinic and triclinic lattices in 3D) to use as the first Brillouin zone not the WignerSeitz cell, but the conventional reciprocal-lattice unit cell, which has a 30 Figure 14: Relation between the Wigner-Seitz cell and the conventional reciprocal-lattice unit cell on the oblique lattice. The latter is usually chosen as the first Brillouin zone on this lattice, because of its simpler shape. simpler parallelogram shape. The relation between these two cells is shown in fig. 14. 4.2.2 The square lattice: a high symmetry case • A more symmetrical situation is show in fig. 15 for the square lattice (Laue symmetry 4mm). A tight-binding potential has been used to calculate constant-energy surfaces, and the group velocity field has been plotted using arrows. • By applying similar symmetry and RLV relations, one finds that the group velocity is zero at the Γ point, and the BZ edge centres and at the BZ corners. • On the BZ edge the group velocity is parallel to the edge. • Inside the BZ, the group velocity of points lying on the mirror planes is parallel to those planes. 4.3 Symmetry in the nearly-free electron model: degenerate wavefunctions • one important class of problems involves the application of degenerate perturbation theory to the free-electron Hamiltonian, perturbed by a weak periodic potential U (r): 31 Figure 15: Constant-energy surfaces and group velocity field on a square lattice, shown in the repeated zone scheme. The energy surfaces have been calculated using a tight-binding potential. 32 H=− ~2 2 ∇ + U (r) 2m (40) • Since the potential is periodic, only degenerate points related by a RLV are allowed to “interact” in degenerate perturbation theory and give rise to non-zero matrix elements. • The 1D case is very simple: Points inside the BZ have a degeneracy of one and correspond to travelling waves. Points at the zone boundary have a degeneracy of two, since k = π/a and therefore k − (−k) = 2π/a is a RLV . The perturbed solutions are standing wave, and have a null group velocity, as we have seen (fig. 12). • The situation is 2D and 3D is rather different, and this is where symmetry can help. In a typical problem, one would be asked to calculate the energy gaps and the level structure at a particular point, usually but not necessarily at the first Brillouin zone boundary. • The first step in the solution involves determining which and how many degenerate free-electron wavefunctions with momenta differing by a RLV have a crystal wavevector at that particular point of the BZ. • Symmetry can be very helpful in setting up this initial step, particularly if the symmetry is sufficiently high. For the detailed calculation of the gaps, we will defer to the “band structure” part of the C3 course. Nearly-free electron degenerate wavefunctions • Draw a circle centred at the Γ point and passing through the BZ point you are asked to consider (either in the first or in higher BZ — see fig. 16). Points on this circle correspond to free-electron wavefunctions having the same energy. • Mark all the points on the circle that are symmetry-equivalent to your BZ point. • Among these, group together the points that are related by a RLV . These points represent the degenerate multiplet you need to apply degenerate perturbation theory. • Write the free-electron wavefunctions of your degenerate multiplet in Bloch form. You will find that all the wavefunctions in each multiplet have the same crystal momentum. Functions in different multiplets have symmetry-related crystal momenta. • This construction is shown in fig. 16 in the case of the square lattice (point group 4mm) for boundary points between different Brillouin zones. One can see that: 33 Figure 16: Construction of nearly-free electron degenerate wavefunctions for the square lattice (point group 4mm). Some special symmetry point are labelled. Relevant RLV s are also indicated. • The degeneracy of points in the interior of the first BZ is always one, since no two points can differ by a RLV . This is not so for higher zones though (see lecture). For points on the boundary of zones or at the interior of higher zones, the formula DN /Mn = D1 /M1 holds, where DN is the degeneracy of the multiplet in the higher zone (the quantity that normally we are asked to find), MN is the multiplicity of that point (to be obtained by symmetry) and D1 and M1 are the values for the corresponding points within or at the boundary of the 1st BZ. X-points: there are 4 such points, and are related in pairs by a RLV . Therefore, there are two symmetry-equivalent doublets of free-electron wavefunctions (which will be split by the periodic potential in two singlets). Y-points: there are 8 such points, and are related in pairs by a RLV . Therefore, there are four symmetry-equivalent doublets of freeelectron wavefunctions (which will be split by the periodic potential in two singlets). M-points: there are 4 such points, all related by RLV s. Therefore, there is a single symmetry-equivalent quadruplet of free-electron 34 wavefunctions (which will be split by the periodic potential in two singlets and a doublet). X2 -points: these are X-point in a higher Brillouin zone. There are 8 such points, related by RLV s in groups of four. Therefore, there are two symmetry-equivalent quadruplets of free-electron wavefunctions (each will be split by the periodic potential in two singlets and a doublet). These two quadruplets will be brought back above (in energy) the previous two doublets in the reduced-zone scheme. 35