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2: Rotational Symmetry

  • Page ID
    474738
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    The structural symmetry of every molecule is summarized by its point group, which is the set of all transformations with respect to a fixed point in space that keep the molecule invariant. Each operation of a point group is either a proper or an improper rotation. A proper rotation is a counterclockwise (ccw) turning by some angle in a plane oriented perpendicular to an axis. An improper rotation is the combination of a proper rotation with either inversion or the reflection in the plane perpendicular to the rotation axis.

    • 2.1: Operations
      Point groups and their operations are denoted by two different but related symbolisms. The Schönflies notation is preferred by molecular chemists because the point group symbol conveys information localized for a single molecule. The International or Hermann-Mauguin notation, on the other hand, is used by crystallographers because the symbol contains information about molecular symmetry relative to an external coordinate system like the unit cell directions of a crystal.
    • 2.2: Point Groups
      The point group for a molecule is the complete set of symmetry operations such that their elements intersect at least as one fixed point.
    • 2.3: Compatibility of Rotations and Lattices
    • 2.4: Crystallographic Point Groups
    • 2.5: Rotations in a Lattice
      In a crystal, on the other hand, a motif repeats periodically throughout real space, so that symmetry elements intersect at many different points. In addition, the unit cell vectors of the lattice serve as the basis of a coordinate system, but these vectors need not be all mutually orthogonal. Therefore, it is important to learn how to express rotations by matrices using a lattice as the basis as well as when rotation axes do not intersect the designated origin.
    • 2.6: Bravais Lattices (2-d)
    • 2.7: Bravais Lattices (3-d)
      The seven 3-d crystal systems generate seven distinct unit cell shapes.


    This page titled 2: Rotational Symmetry is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Gordon J Miller via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.