Lattice:Packing fraction
Revision as of 10:02, 18 June 2014 by KevinYager (talk | contribs)
The packing fraction (or particle volume fraction) for a lattice is given by:
Where N is the number of particles per unit cell (which has volume ). For a sphere, the volume is so:
For a cubic unit cell of edge-length a:
Examples
For a FCC lattice, the packing fraction is 0.740:
- Nearest-neighbor distance:
- Assuming spherical particles of radius R:
- Particle volume fraction:
- Maximum volume fraction: when
For a BCC lattice, the packing fraction is 0.680:
- Nearest-neighbor distance:
- Assuming spherical particles of radius R:
- Particle volume fraction:
- Maximum volume fraction: when
For a diamond lattice, the packing fraction is 0.340:
- Nearest-neighbor distance:
- Assuming spherical particles of radius R:
- Particle volume fraction:
- Maximum volume fraction: Failed to parse (Conversion error. Server ("https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_") reported: "Cannot get mml. Server problem."): {\displaystyle \phi _{max}=\pi {\sqrt {3}}/16\approx 0.340} when Failed to parse (Conversion error. Server ("https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_") reported: "Cannot get mml. Server problem."): {\displaystyle R=a{\sqrt {3}}/8}