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Brillouin zone
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In and solid state physics, the first Brillouin zone (named after Léon Brillouin) is a uniquely defined in . In the same way the is divided up into Wigner–Seitz cells in the real lattice, the reciprocal lattice is broken up into Brillouin zones. The boundaries of this cell are given by planes related to points on the reciprocal lattice. The importance of the Brillouin zone stems from the description of waves in a periodic medium given by Bloch's theorem, in which it is found that the solutions can be completely characterized by their behavior in a single Brillouin zone.

The first Brillouin zone is the locus of points in reciprocal space that are closer to the origin of the reciprocal lattice than they are to any other reciprocal lattice points (see the derivation of the Wigner–Seitz cell). Another definition is as the set of points in k-space that can be reached from the origin without crossing any . Equivalently, this is the around the origin of the reciprocal lattice.

There are also second, third, etc., Brillouin zones, corresponding to a sequence of disjoint regions (all with the same volume) at increasing distances from the origin, but these are used less frequently. As a result, the first Brillouin zone is often called simply the Brillouin zone. In general, the n-th Brillouin zone consists of the set of points that can be reached from the origin by crossing exactly n − 1 distinct Bragg planes. A related concept is that of the irreducible Brillouin zone, which is the first Brillouin zone reduced by all of the symmetries in the of the lattice (point group of the crystal).

The concept of a Brillouin zone was developed by Léon Brillouin (1889–1969), a French physicist.

Within the Brillouin zone, a constant-energy surface represents the loci of all the \vec{k}-points (that is, all the electron momentum values) that have the same energy. is a special constant-energy surface that separates the unfilled orbitals from the filled ones at zero kelvin.


Critical points
Several points of high symmetry are of special interest – these are called critical points.
(1996). 9783540585732, Springer-Verlag.

Center of the Brillouin zone
Center of an edge
Corner point
Center of a face
Middle of an edge joining two hexagonal faces
Center of a hexagonal face
Middle of an edge joining a hexagonal and a square face
Corner point
Center of a square face
Corner point joining four edges
Center of a face
Corner point joining three edges
Center of a hexagonal face
Corner point
Middle of an edge joining two rectangular faces
Middle of an edge joining a hexagonal and a rectangular face
Center of a rectangular face
Other lattices have different types of high-symmetry points. They can be found in the illustrations below.

+ Brillouin zone types ! Lattice system ! Bravais lattice (Abbreviation)


See also
  • Fundamental pair of periods
    • Fundamental domain


Bibliography


External links

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