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  2. Lattice constant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lattice_constant

    Unit cell definition using parallelepiped with lengths a, b, c and angles between the sides given by α, β, γ [1]. A lattice constant or lattice parameter is one of the physical dimensions and angles that determine the geometry of the unit cells in a crystal lattice, and is proportional to the distance between atoms in the crystal.

  3. Lattice model (biophysics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lattice_model_(biophysics)

    Lattice models in biophysics represent a class of statistical-mechanical models which consider a biological macromacromolecule (such as DNA, protein, actin, etc.) as a lattice of units, each unit being in different states or conformations.

  4. Lattice protein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lattice_protein

    Lattice proteins are highly simplified models of protein-like heteropolymer chains on lattice conformational space which are used to investigate protein folding. [1] Simplification in lattice proteins is twofold: each whole residue ( amino acid ) is modeled as a single "bead" or "point" of a finite set of types (usually only two), and each ...

  5. Crystal structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_structure

    The lengths of principal axes/edges, of unit cell and angles between them are lattice constants, also called lattice parameters or cell parameters. The symmetry properties of crystal are described by the concept of space groups. [1] All possible symmetric arrangements of particles in three-dimensional space may be described by 230 space groups.

  6. Unit cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_cell

    A primitive cell is a unit cell that contains exactly one lattice point. For unit cells generally, lattice points that are shared by n cells are counted as ⁠ 1 / n ⁠ of the lattice points contained in each of those cells; so for example a primitive unit cell in three dimensions which has lattice points only at its eight vertices is considered to contain ⁠ 1 / 8 ⁠ of each of them. [3]

  7. Miller index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miller_index

    The [100], [010] and the [1 1 0] directions are really similar. If S is the intercept of the plane with the [1 1 0] axis, then i = 1/S. There are also ad hoc schemes (e.g. in the transmission electron microscopy literature) for indexing hexagonal lattice vectors (rather than reciprocal lattice vectors or planes) with four indices. However they ...

  8. Weighted planar stochastic lattice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weighted_planar_stochastic...

    In applied mathematics, a weighted planar stochastic lattice (WPSL) is a structure that has properties in common with those of lattices and those of graphs. In general, space-filling planar cellular structures can be useful in a wide variety of seemingly disparate physical and biological systems.

  9. Bravais lattice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bravais_lattice

    Primitive unit cells are defined as unit cells with the smallest volume for a given crystal. (A crystal is a lattice and a basis at every lattice point.) To have the smallest cell volume, a primitive unit cell must contain (1) only one lattice point and (2) the minimum amount of basis constituents (e.g., the minimum number of atoms in a basis).