This articles gives the crystalline structures of the elements of the periodic table which have been produced in bulk at STP and at their melting point (while still solid) and predictions of the crystalline structures of the rest of the elements.

Standard temperature and pressure

The following table gives the crystalline structure of the most thermodynamically stable form(s) for elements that are solid at standard temperature and pressure. Each element is shaded by a color representing its respective Bravais lattice, except that all orthorhombic lattices are grouped together.

Crystal structure of elements in the periodic table at standard temperature and pressure
1 H2 He
3 Li W4 Be Mg5 B β-B6 C g-C7 N8 O9 F10 Ne
11 Na W12 Mg Mg13 Al Cu14 Si d-C15 P b-P16 S α-S17 Cl18 Ar
19 K W20 Ca Cu21 Sc Mg22 Ti Mg23 V W24 Cr W25 Mn α-Mn26 Fe W27 Co Mg28 Ni Cu29 Cu Cu30 Zn Mg31 Ga α-Ga32 Ge d-C33 As α-As34 Se γ-Se35 Br36 Kr
37 Rb W38 Sr Cu39 Y Mg40 Zr Mg41 Nb W42 Mo W43 Tc Mg44 Ru Mg45 Rh Cu46 Pd Cu47 Ag Cu48 Cd Mg49 In In50 Sn β-Sn51 Sb α-As52 Te γ-Se53 I Cl54 Xe
55 Cs W56 Ba W71 Lu Mg72 Hf Mg73 Ta W74 W W75 Re Mg76 Os Mg77 Ir Cu78 Pt Cu79 Au Cu80 Hg81 Tl Mg82 Pb Cu83 Bi α-As84 Po α-Po85 At86 Rn
87 Fr88 Ra W103 Lr104 Rf105 Db106 Sg107 Bh108 Hs109 Mt110 Ds111 Rg112 Cn113 Nh114 Fl115 Mc116 Lv117 Ts118 Og
57 La α-La58 Ce α-La59 Pr α-La60 Nd α-La61 Pm α-La62 Sm α-Sm63 Eu W64 Gd Mg65 Tb Mg66 Dy Mg67 Ho Mg68 Er Mg69 Tm Mg70 Yb Cu
89 Ac Cu90 Th Cu91 Pa α-Pa92 U α-U93 Np α-Np94 Pu α-Pu95 Am α-La96 Cm α-La97 Bk α-La98 Cf α-La99 Es Cu100 Fm101 Md102 No
Legend:
Primitive monoclinic structures: α-Pu
Orthorhombic structures: b-P, α-Ga, Cl, α-U, α-S, α-Np
Body-centered tetragonal structures: In, β-Sn, α-Pa
Rhombohedral structures: β-B, α-As, α-Sm
Hexagonal structures: Mg, α-La, g-C, γ-Se
Primitive cubic structures: α-Po
Body-centered cubic structures: W, α-Mn
Face-centered cubic structures: d-C, Cu
Not solid at standard temperature and pressure or uncertain

Melting point and standard pressure

The following table gives the most stable crystalline structure of each element at its melting point at atmospheric pressure (H, He, N, O, F, Ne, Cl, Ar, Kr, Xe, and Rn are gases at STP; Br and Hg are liquids at STP.) Note that helium does not have a melting point at atmospheric pressure, but it adopts a magnesium-type hexagonal close-packed structure under high pressure.

Crystal structures of elements at their melting points at atmospheric pressure
1 H 13 K Mg2 He *
3 Li 453 K W4 Be 1560 K W5 B 2349 K β-B6 C 3800 K g-C7 N 63 K β-N8 O 54 K γ-O9 F 53 K γ-O10 Ne 24 K Cu
11 Na 370 K W12 Mg 923 K Mg13 Al 933 K Cu14 Si 1687 K d-C15 P 883 K b-P16 S 393 K β-S17 Cl 171 K Cl18 Ar 83 K Cu
19 K 336 K W20 Ca 1115 K W21 Sc 1814 K W22 Ti 1941 K W23 V 2183 K W24 Cr 2180 K W25 Mn 1519 K W26 Fe 1811 K W27 Co 1768 K Cu28 Ni 1728 K Cu29 Cu 1357 K Cu30 Zn 692 K Mg31 Ga 302 K α-Ga32 Ge 1211 K d-C33 As 1090 K b-P34 Se 494 K γ-Se35 Br 265 K Cl36 Kr 115 K Cu
37 Rb 312 K W38 Sr 1050 K W39 Y 1799 K W40 Zr 2128 K W41 Nb 2750 K W42 Mo 2896 K W43 Tc 2430 K Mg44 Ru 2607 K Mg45 Rh 2237 K Cu46 Pd 1828 K Cu47 Ag 1234 K Cu48 Cd 594 K Mg49 In 429 K In50 Sn 505 K β-Sn51 Sb 903 K α-As52 Te 722 K γ-Se53 I 386 K Cl54 Xe 161 K Cu
55 Cs 301 K W56 Ba 1000 K W71 Lu 1925 K Mg72 Hf 2506 K W73 Ta 3290 K W74 W 3695 K W75 Re 3459 K Mg76 Os 3306 K Mg77 Ir 2719 K Cu78 Pt 2041 K Cu79 Au 1337 K Cu80 Hg 234 K α-Hg81 Tl 557 K W82 Pb 600 K Cu83 Bi 544 K α-As84 Po 527 K β-Po85 At 575 K? ?86 Rn 202 K ?
87 Fr 281 K? ?88 Ra 973 K W103 Lr 1900 K? ?104 Rf ?105 Db ?106 Sg ?107 Bh ?108 Hs ?109 Mt ?110 Ds ?111 Rg ?112 Cn ?113 Nh ?114 Fl ?115 Mc ?116 Lv ?117 Ts ?118 Og ?
57 La 1193 K W58 Ce 1068 K W59 Pr 1208 K W60 Nd 1297 K W61 Pm 1315 K W62 Sm 1345 K W63 Eu 1099 K W64 Gd 1585 K W65 Tb 1629 K W66 Dy 1680 K W67 Ho 1734 K Mg68 Er 1802 K Mg69 Tm 1818 K Mg70 Yb 1097 K W
89 Ac 1323 K Cu90 Th 2115 K W91 Pa 1841 K W92 U 1405 K W93 Np 917 K W94 Pu 912 K W95 Am 1449 K W96 Cm 1613 K Cu97 Bk 1259 K Cu98 Cf 1173 K Cu99 Es 1133 K Cu100 Fm 1800 K? ?101 Md 1100 K? ?102 No 1100 K? ?
Legend:
Primitive monoclinic structures: β-S
Orthorhombic structures: b-P, α-S, Cl, α-Ga
Body-centered tetragonal structures: In, β-Sn
Rhombohedral structures: β-B, α-As, α-Hg, β-Po
Primitive Hexagonal structures: Mg, g-C, β-N, γ-Se
Primitive cubic structure: γ-O
Body-centered cubic structure: W
Face-centered cubic structures: Cu, d-C
unknown or uncertain

Predicted structures

The following table give predictions for the crystalline structure of elements 85–87, 100–113 and 118; all but radon have not been produced in bulk. Most probably Cn and Fl would be liquids at STP (ignoring radioactive self-heating concerns). Calculations have difficulty replicating the experimentally known structures of the stable alkali metals, and the same problem affects Fr; nonetheless, it is probably isostructural to its lighter congeners. The latest predictions for Fl could not distinguish between FCC and HCP structures, which were predicted to be close in energy. No predictions are available for elements 115–117.

Predicted crystal structures of highly unstable elements
1 H2 He
3 Li4 Be5 B6 C7 N8 O9 F10 Ne
11 Na12 Mg13 Al14 Si15 P16 S17 Cl18 Ar
19 K20 Ca21 Sc22 Ti23 V24 Cr25 Mn26 Fe27 Co28 Ni29 Cu30 Zn31 Ga32 Ge33 As34 Se35 Br36 Kr
37 Rb38 Sr39 Y40 Zr41 Nb42 Mo43 Tc44 Ru45 Rh46 Pd47 Ag48 Cd49 In50 Sn51 Sb52 Te53 I54 Xe
55 Cs56 Ba71 Lu72 Hf73 Ta74 W75 Re76 Os77 Ir78 Pt79 Au80 Hg81 Tl82 Pb83 Bi84 Po85 At [Cu]86 Rn [Cu]
87 Fr [W]88 Ra103 Lr [Mg]104 Rf [Mg]105 Db [W]106 Sg [W]107 Bh [Mg]108 Hs [Mg]109 Mt [Cu]110 Ds [W]111 Rg [W]112 Cn [Mg]113 Nh [Mg]114 Fl115 Mc116 Lv117 Ts118 Og [Cu]
57 La58 Ce59 Pr60 Nd61 Pm62 Sm63 Eu64 Gd65 Tb66 Dy67 Ho68 Er69 Tm70 Yb
89 Ac90 Th91 Pa92 U93 Np94 Pu95 Am96 Cm97 Bk98 Cf99 Es100 Fm [Cu]101 Md [Cu]102 No [Cu]
Legend:
[…] predicted structure
Elements with known structure.
Body-centered cubic structure: W
Face-centered cubic structures: Cu
Primitive Hexagonal structures: Mg
unknown or uncertain

Structure types

The following is a list of structure types which appear in the tables above. Regarding the number of atoms in the unit cell, structures in the rhombohedral lattice system have a rhombohedral primitive cell and have trigonal point symmetry but are also often also described in terms of an equivalent but nonprimitive hexagonal unit cell with three times the volume and three times the number of atoms.

PrototypeStrukturberichtDiagramLattice systemSpace groupAtoms per unit cellCoordinationnotes
α-Pu(none)MonoclinicP21/m (No. 11)16slightly distorted hexagonal structure. Lattice parameters: a = 618.3 pm, b = 482.2 pm, c = 1096.3 pm, β = 101.79°
β-S(none)MonoclinicP21/c (No. 14)32
α-NpAcOrthorhombicPnma (No. 62)8highly distorted bcc structure. Lattice parameters: a = 666.3 pm, b = 472.3 pm, c = 488.7 pm
α-UA20OrthorhombicCmcm (No. 63)4Each atom has four near neighbours, 2 at 275.4 pm, 2 at 285.4 pm. The next four at distances 326.3 pm and four more at 334.2 pm.Strongly distorted hcp structure.
α-GaA11OrthorhombicCmce (No. 64)8each Ga atom has one nearest neighbour at 244 pm, 2 at 270 pm, 2 at 273 pm, 2 at 279 pm.The structure is related to that of iodine.
b-PA17OrthorhombicCmce (No. 64)8Specifically the black phosphorus form of phosphorus.
ClA14OrthorhombicCmce (No. 64)8
α-SA16OrthorhombicFddd (No. 70)16
InA6TetragonalI4/mmm (No. 139)2Identical symmetry to the α-Pa type structure. Can be considered slightly distorted from an ideal Cu type face-centered cubic structure which has c / a = 2 {\displaystyle c/a={\sqrt {2}}}.
α-PaAaTetragonalI4/mmm (No. 139)2Identical symmetry to the In type structure. Can be considered slightly distorted from an ideal W type body centered cubic structure which has c / a = 1 {\displaystyle c/a=1}.
β-SnA5TetragonalI41/amd (No. 141)44 neighbours at 302 pm; 2 at 318 pm; 4 at 377 pm; 8 at 441 pmwhite tin form (thermodynamical stable above 286.4 K)
β-B(none)RhombohedralR3m (No. 166)105 (rh.) 315 (hex.)Partly due to its complexity, whether this structure is the ground state of Boron has not been fully settled.
α-AsA7RhombohedralR3m (No. 166)2 (rh.) 6 (hex.)in grey metallic form, each As atom has 3 neighbours in the same sheet at 251.7pm; 3 in adjacent sheet at 312.0 pm. each Bi atom has 3 neighbours in the same sheet at 307.2 pm; 3 in adjacent sheet at 352.9 pm. each Sb atom has 3 neighbours in the same sheet at 290.8pm; 3 in adjacent sheet at 335.5 pm.puckered sheet
α-Sm(none)RhombohedralR3m (No. 166)3 (rh.) 9 (hex.)12 nearest neighbourscomplex hcp with 9-layer repeat: ABCBCACAB....
α-HgA10RhombohedralR3m (No. 166)1 (rh.) 3 (hex.)6 nearest neighbours at 234 K and 1 atm (it is liquid at room temperature and thus has no crystal structure at ambient conditions!)Identical symmetry to the β-Po structure, distinguished based on details about the basis vectors of its unit cell. This structure can also be considered to be a distorted hcp lattice with the nearest neighbours in the same plane being approx 16% farther away
β-PoAiRhombohedralR3m (No. 166)1 (rh.) 3 (hex.)Identical symmetry to the α-Hg structure, distinguished based on details about the basis vectors of its unit cell.
γ-SeA8HexagonalP321 (No. 154)3
MgA3HexagonalP63/mmc (No. 194)2Zn has 6 nearest neighbors in same plane: 6 in adjacent planes 14% farther away Cd has 6 nearest neighbours in the same plane- 6 in adjacent planes 15% farther awayIf the unit cell axial ratio is exactly 2 2 3 ≈ 1.633 {\textstyle 2{\sqrt {\frac {2}{3}}}\approx 1.633} the structure would be a mathematical hexagonal close packed (HCP) structure. However, in real materials there are deviations from this in some metals where the unit cell is distorted in one direction but the structure still retains the hcp space group—remarkable all the elements have a ratio of lattice parameters c/a < 1.633 (best are Mg and Co and worst Be with c/a ~ 1.568). In others like Zn and Cd the deviations from the ideal change the symmetry of the structure and these have a lattice parameter ratio c/a > 1.85.
g-CA9HexagonalP63/mmc (No. 194)4Specifically the graphite form of carbon.
α-LaA3'HexagonalP63/mmc (No. 194)4The Double hexagonal close packed (DHCP) structure. Similar to the ideal hcp structure, the perfect dhcp structure should have a lattice parameter ratio of c a = 4 2 3 ≈ 3.267. {\textstyle {\frac {c}{a}}=4{\sqrt {\frac {2}{3}}}\approx 3.267.} In the real dhcp structures of 5 lanthanides (including β-Ce) c / 2 a {\textstyle c/2a} variates between 1.596 (Pm) and 1.6128 (Nd). For the four known actinides dhcp lattices the corresponding number vary between 1.620 (Bk) and 1.625 (Cf).
β-N(none)HexagonalP63/mmc (No. 194)4
α-PoAhCubicPm3m (No. 221)16 nearest neighbourssimple cubic lattice. The atoms in the unit cell are at the corner of a cube.
γ-O(none)CubicPm3n (No. 223)16Closely related to the β-W structure, except with a diatomic oxygen molecule in place of each tungsten atom. The molecules can rotate in place, but the direction of rotation for some of the molecules is restricted.
α-MnA12CubicI43m (No. 217)58Unit cell contains Mn atoms in 4 different environments.Distorted bcc
WA2CubicIm3m (No. 229)2The Body centered cubic structure (BCC). It is not a close packed structure. In this each metal atom is at the centre of a cube with 8 nearest neighbors, however the 6 atoms at the centres of the adjacent cubes are only approximately 15% further away so the coordination number can therefore be considered to be 14 when these are on one 4 fold axe structure becomes face-centred cubic (cubic close packed).
CuA1CubicFm3m (No. 225)4The face-centered cubic (cubic close packed) structure. More content relating to number of planes within structure and implications for glide/slide e.g. ductility.
d-CA4CubicFd3m (No. 227)8The diamond cubic (DC) structure. Specifically the diamond form of Carbon.

Close packed metal structures

The observed crystal structures of many metals can be described as a nearly mathematical close-packing of equal spheres. A simple model for both of these is to assume that the metal atoms are spherical and are packed together as closely as possible. In closest packing, every atom has 12 equidistant nearest neighbours, and therefore a coordination number of 12. If the close packed structures are considered as being built of layers of spheres, then the difference between hexagonal close packing and face-centred cubic is how each layer is positioned relative to others. The following types can be viewed as a regular buildup of close-packed layers:

  • Mg type (hexagonal close packing) has alternate layers positioned directly above/below each other: A,B,A,B,...
  • Cu type (face-centered cubic) has every third layer directly above/below each other: A,B,C,A,B,C,...
  • α-La type (double hexagonal close packing) has layers directly above/below each other, A,B,A,C,A,B,A,C,.... of period length 4 like an alternative mixture of fcc and hcp packing.
  • α-Sm type has a period of 9 layers A,B,A,B,C,B,C,A,C,...

Precisely speaking, the structures of many of the elements in the groups above are slightly distorted from the ideal closest packing. While they retain the lattice symmetry as the ideal structure, they often have nonideal c/a ratios for their unit cell. Less precisely speaking, there are also other elements are nearly close-packed but have distortions which have at least one broken symmetry with respect to the close-packed structure:

  • In type is slightly distorted from a cubic close packed structure
  • α-Pa type is distorted from a hexagonal close packed structure

See also

General

  • P.A. Sterne; A. Gonis; A.A. Borovoi, eds. (July 1996). "Actinides and the Environment". Proc. of the NATO Advanced Study Institute on Actinides and the Environment. NATO ASI Series. Maleme, Crete, Greece: Kluver Academic Publishers. pp. 59–61. ISBN 0-7923-4968-7.
  • L.R. Morss; Norman M. Edelstein; Jean Fuger, eds. (2007). The Chemistry of the Actinide and Transactinide Elements (3rd ed.). Springer. ISBN 978-1-4020-3555-5.

External links