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  2. Caesium chloride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesium_chloride

    The caesium chloride structure adopts a primitive cubic lattice with a two-atom basis, where both atoms have eightfold coordination. The chloride atoms lie upon the lattice points at the corners of the cube, while the caesium atoms lie in the holes in the center of the cubes; an alternative and exactly equivalent 'setting' has the caesium ions at the corners and the chloride ion in the center.

  3. Cubic crystal system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_crystal_system

    A network model of a primitive cubic system The primitive and cubic close-packed (also known as face-centered cubic) unit cells. In crystallography, the cubic (or isometric) crystal system is a crystal system where the unit cell is in the shape of a cube. This is one of the most common and simplest shapes found in crystals and minerals.

  4. 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]

  5. 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.

  6. Crystal structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_structure

    The unit cell is defined as the smallest repeating unit having the full symmetry of the crystal structure. [2] The geometry of the unit cell is defined as a parallelepiped, providing six lattice parameters taken as the lengths of the cell edges (a, b, c) and the angles between them (α, β, γ). The positions of particles inside the unit cell ...

  7. Structure factor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structure_factor

    Cesium chloride is a simple cubic crystal lattice with a basis of Cs at (0,0,0) and Cl at (1/2, 1/2, 1/2) (or the other way around, it makes no difference). Equation ( 8 ) becomes

  8. Caesium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesium

    The process yielded 9.2 grams (0.32 oz) of rubidium chloride and 7.3 grams (0.26 oz) of caesium chloride from the initial 44,000 litres of mineral water. [ 75 ] From the caesium chloride, the two scientists estimated the atomic weight of the new element at 123.35 (compared to the currently accepted one of 132.9). [ 75 ]

  9. List of human blood components - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_human_blood_components

    Needed for nerve cells, red blood cells, and to make DNA 6-14 × 10 −10: 1-10 × 10 −10: Cocarboxylase: 7-9 × 10 −8: Complement system: C1q 5.8-7.2 × 10 −5: C1r 2.5-3.8 × 10 −5: C1s (C1 esterase) 2.5-3.8 × 10 −5: C2 2.2-3.4 × 10 −5: C3( b1C-globulin) 8-15.5 × 10 −4: factor B (C3 proactivator) 2-4.5 × 10 −4: C4 (b1E ...