In geometry and crystallography, the Laves graph is an infinite and highly symmetric system of points and line segments in three-dimensional Euclidean space, forming a periodic graph. Three equal-length segments meet at 120° angles at each point, and all cycles use ten or more segments. It is the shortest possible triply periodic graph, relative to the volume of its fundamental domain. One arrangement of the Laves graph uses one out of every eight of the points in the integer lattice as its points, and connects all pairs of these points that are nearest neighbors, at distance . It can also be defined, divorced from its geometry, as an abstract undirected graph, a covering graph of the complete graph on four vertices.
named this graph after [[Fritz Laves]], who first wrote about it as a crystal structure in 1932. It has also been called the '''''K''4 crystal''', '''(10,3)-a network''', '''diamond twin''', '''triamond''', and the '''srs net'''. The regions of space nearest each vertex of the graph are congruent 17-sided polyhedra that tile space. Its edges lie on diagonals of the regular skew polyhedron, a surface with six squares meeting at each integer point of space.
Several crystalline chemicals have known or predicted structures in the form of the Laves graph. Thickening the edges of the Laves graph to cylinders produces a related minimal surface, the gyroid, which appears physically in certain soap film structures and in the wings of butterflies.
It is possible to choose a larger set of one out of every four points of the integer lattice, so that the graph of distance- pairs of this larger set forms two mirror-image copies of the Laves graph, disconnected from each other, with all other pairs of points farther than apart.
A maximal abelian covering graph can be constructed from any finite graph ; applied to , the construction produces the (abstract) Laves graph, but does not give it the same geometric layout. Choose a spanning tree of , let be the number of edges that are not in the spanning tree (in this case, three non-tree edges), and choose a distinct unit vector in for each of these non-tree edges. Then, fix the set of vertices of the covering graph to be the ordered pairs where is a vertex of and is a vector in . For each such pair, and each edge adjacent to in , make an edge from to where is the zero vector if belongs to the spanning tree, and is otherwise the basis vector associated with , and where the plus or minus sign is chosen according to the direction the edge is traversed. The resulting graph is independent of the chosen spanning tree, and the same construction can also be interpreted more abstractly using homology.
Using the same construction, the hexagonal tiling of the plane is the maximal abelian covering graph of the three-edge dipole graph, and the diamond cubic is the maximal abelian covering graph of the four-edge dipole. The -dimensional integer lattice (as a graph with unit-length edges) is the maximal abelian covering graph of a graph with one vertex and .
Another subgraph of the simple cubic net isomorphic to the Laves graph is obtained by removing half of the edges in a certain way. The resulting structure, called semi-simple cubic lattice, also has lower symmetry than the Laves graph itself.
The girth of this structure is 10—the shortest cycles in the graph have 10 vertices—and 15 of these cycles pass through each vertex. The numbers of vertices at distance 0, 1, 2, ... from any vertex (forming the coordination sequence of the Laves graph) are:
If the surrounding space is partitioned into the regions nearest each vertex—the cells of the Voronoi diagram of this structure—these form Heptadecahedron with 17 faces each. They are plesiohedron, polyhedra that tile space isohedral tiling. Experimenting with the structures formed by these polyhedra led physicist Alan Schoen to discover the gyroid minimal surface, which is topologically equivalent to the surface obtained by thickening the edges of the Laves graph to cylinders and taking the boundary of their union.
The Laves graph is the unique shortest triply-periodic network, in the following sense. Triply-periodic means repeating infinitely in all three dimensions of space, so a triply-periodic network is a connected geometric graph with a three-dimensional lattice of translational symmetries. A fundamental domain is any shape that can tile space with its translated copies under these symmetries. Any lattice has infinitely many choices of fundamental domain, of varying shapes, but they all have the same volume . One can also measure the length of the edges of the network within a single copy of the fundamental domain; call this number . Similarly to , does not depend on the choice of fundamental domain, as long as the domain boundary only crosses the edges, rather than containing parts of their length. The Laves graph has four symmetry classes of vertices ( orbits), because the symmetries considered here are only translations, not the rotations needed to map these four classes into each other. Each symmetry class has one vertex in any fundamental domain, so the fundamental domain contains twelve half-edges, with total length . The volume of its fundamental domain is 32. From these two numbers, the ratio (a dimensionless quantity) is therefore . This is in fact the minimum possible value: All triply-periodic networks have with equality only in the case of the Laves graph.
The Laves graph may also give a crystal structure for boron, one which computations predict should be stable. Other chemicals that may form this structure include SrSi2 (from which the "srs net" name derives) and elemental nitrogen, as well as certain metal–organic frameworks and Cyclic compound .
The electronic band structure for the tight-binding model of the Laves graph has been studied, showing the existence of Dirac cone in this structure.
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