Making Matter

How do Atoms Pack Together ?

Index © M. Hewat 1998 Help 

Imagine a stack of balls in a box. This was actually how structures were first visualised before computers (BC). The balls will pack together to fill up all the space. This is called ¶ close packing - you can see how it works if you look at a pile of oranges in the supermarket. Notice how the oranges form a pattern. Each orange labelled A will be surrounded by six other oranges within one layer. Notice the holes labelled B and C. We can place a second layer of close-packed oranges on either the B-sites or the C-sites (but not both). In this way we can build up a 3D structure.

Does this structure correspond to anything in nature (apart from oranges in supermarkets) ? Of course ! A stack of layers of types ABC.ABC... represents the ¶cubic close-packed CCP atomic structure of gold as determined by X-rays. Atoms lie on the corners of a cube, with additional atoms at the centers of each cube face: for that reason it is often called face centered cubic or FCC. Many simple metals have this FCC structure, whose symmetry is described as Fm-3m where F means Face-centered,m signifies a mirror-plane (there are two) and -3 tells us that there is a 3-fold symmetry axis (along the body diagonal) as well as inversion symmetry.

Actually there is another common form of close-packing, corresponding to layers with stacking AB.AB... or AC.AC... (these are equivalent). This is called ¶hexagonal close-packing HCP, and the competition between CCP and HCP is determined by longer range forces between the atoms. This is the structure of sodium at low temperatures. No, we can't transform sodium to gold by stacking the atoms differently ! For such simple materials, the different properties are mainly due to the differences between the sodium and gold atoms themselves.

The third common metallic structure is called ¶body-centered cubic BCC, and consists of a unit cube with atoms at its corners and center. The BCC structure is slightly less closely packed than FCC or HCP and is often the high temperature form of metals that are close-packed at lower temperatures. For example sodium changes from HCP to BCC above -237 degrees C ! The structure of iron (Fe) can be either CCP or BCC depending on its heat treatment, while metals such as chromium are always BCC.

Metals which are BCC are, like chromium, usually harder and less malleable than close-packed metals such as gold. When the metal is deformed, the planes of atoms must slip over each other, and this is more difficult in the BCC structure. Note that there are other important mechanisms for hardening metals, and these involve introducing impurities or defects which also block slipping.

Hmm. That's all very well if we have only one kind of atom, but what if we have two or more types of atom, such as sodium and chlorine in common salt ? Here's a clue: when the big atoms pack together, they still leave holes for the smaller atoms. Lets see how this works for salt !


Please report any problems to hewat@ill.fr.