
Reciprocal lattice is a concept associated with solids with
translational symmetry which plays a major role in many areas such as
X-ray
An X-ray (also known in many languages as Röntgen radiation) is a form of high-energy electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength shorter than those of ultraviolet rays and longer than those of gamma rays. Roughly, X-rays have a wavelength ran ...
and
electron
The electron (, or in nuclear reactions) is a subatomic particle with a negative one elementary charge, elementary electric charge. It is a fundamental particle that comprises the ordinary matter that makes up the universe, along with up qua ...
diffraction as well as the
energies of electrons in a solid. It emerges from the
Fourier transform of the
lattice associated with the arrangement of the atoms. The ''direct lattice'' or ''real lattice'' is a
periodic function
A periodic function, also called a periodic waveform (or simply periodic wave), is a function that repeats its values at regular intervals or periods. The repeatable part of the function or waveform is called a ''cycle''. For example, the t ...
in
physical space, such as a
crystal system (usually a
Bravais lattice). The reciprocal lattice exists in the
mathematical space of
spatial frequencies or
wavenumbers ''k'', known as reciprocal space or ''k'' space; it is the dual of physical space considered as a
vector space
In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set (mathematics), set whose elements, often called vector (mathematics and physics), ''vectors'', can be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called sc ...
. In other words, the reciprocal lattice is the
sublattice which
is dual to the direct lattice.
The reciprocal lattice is the set of all
vectors , that are
wavevectors k of plane waves in the Fourier series of a spatial function whose periodicity is the same as that of a direct lattice
. Each plane wave in this Fourier series has the same phase or phases that are differed by multiples of
, at each direct lattice point (so essentially same phase at all the direct lattice points).
The reciprocal lattice of a reciprocal lattice is equivalent to the original direct lattice, because the defining equations are symmetrical with respect to the vectors in real and reciprocal space. Mathematically, direct and reciprocal lattice vectors represent
covariant and contravariant vectors, respectively.
The
Brillouin zone is a
Wigner–Seitz cell of the reciprocal lattice.
Wave-based description
Reciprocal space
Reciprocal space (also called -space) provides a way to visualize the results of the
Fourier transform of a spatial function. It is similar in role to the
frequency domain arising from the Fourier transform of a time dependent function; reciprocal space is a space over which the Fourier transform of a spatial function is represented at spatial frequencies or wavevectors of plane waves of the Fourier transform. The domain of the spatial function itself is often referred to as
spatial domain or real space. In physical applications, such as crystallography, both real and reciprocal space will often each be two or three dimensional. Whereas the number of spatial dimensions of these two associated spaces will be the same, the spaces will differ in their
quantity dimension, so that when the real space has the dimension length (L), its reciprocal space will have
inverse length, so L
−1 (the reciprocal of length).
Reciprocal space comes into play regarding waves, both classical and quantum mechanical. Because a
sinusoidal plane wave with unit amplitude can be written as an oscillatory term
, with initial
phase ,
angular wavenumber and
angular frequency
In physics, angular frequency (symbol ''ω''), also called angular speed and angular rate, is a scalar measure of the angle rate (the angle per unit time) or the temporal rate of change of the phase argument of a sinusoidal waveform or sine ...
, it can be regarded as a function of both
and
(and the time-varying part as a function of both
and
). This complementary role of
and
leads to their visualization within complementary spaces (the real space and the reciprocal space). The spatial periodicity of this wave is defined by its wavelength
, where
; hence the corresponding wavenumber in reciprocal space will be
.
In three dimensions, the corresponding plane wave term becomes
, which simplifies to
at a fixed time
, where
is the position vector of a point in real space and now
is the
wavevector in the three dimensional reciprocal space. (The magnitude of a wavevector is called wavenumber.) The constant
is the phase of the
wavefront
In physics, the wavefront of a time-varying ''wave field (physics), field'' is the set (locus (mathematics), locus) of all point (geometry), points having the same ''phase (waves), phase''. The term is generally meaningful only for fields that, a ...
(a plane of a constant phase) through the origin
at time
, and
is a unit
normal vector to this wavefront. The wavefronts with phases
, where
represents any
integer
An integer is the number zero (0), a positive natural number (1, 2, 3, ...), or the negation of a positive natural number (−1, −2, −3, ...). The negations or additive inverses of the positive natural numbers are referred to as negative in ...
, comprise a set of parallel planes, equally spaced by the wavelength
.
Reciprocal lattice
In general, a geometric lattice is an infinite, regular array of vertices (points) in space, which can be modelled vectorially as a
Bravais lattice. Some lattices may be skew, which means that their primary lines may not necessarily be at right angles. In reciprocal space, a reciprocal lattice is defined as the set of
wavevectors
of plane waves in the
Fourier series
A Fourier series () is an Series expansion, expansion of a periodic function into a sum of trigonometric functions. The Fourier series is an example of a trigonometric series. By expressing a function as a sum of sines and cosines, many problems ...
of any function
whose periodicity is compatible with that of an initial direct lattice in real space. Equivalently, a wavevector is a vertex of the reciprocal lattice if it corresponds to a plane wave in real space whose phase at any given time is the same (actually differs by
with an integer
) at every direct lattice vertex.
One heuristic approach to constructing the reciprocal lattice in three dimensions is to write the position vector of a vertex of the direct lattice as
, where the
are integers defining the vertex and the
are
linearly independent
In the theory of vector spaces, a set of vectors is said to be if there exists no nontrivial linear combination of the vectors that equals the zero vector. If such a linear combination exists, then the vectors are said to be . These concep ...
primitive translation vectors (or shortly called primitive vectors) that are characteristic of the lattice. There is then a unique plane wave (up to a factor of negative one), whose wavefront through the origin
contains the direct lattice points at
and
, and with its adjacent wavefront (whose phase differs by
or
from the former wavefront passing the origin) passing through
. Its angular wavevector takes the form
, where
is the unit vector perpendicular to these two adjacent wavefronts and the wavelength
must satisfy
, means that
is equal to the distance between the two wavefronts. Hence by construction
and
.
Cycling through the indices in turn, the same method yields three wavevectors
with
, where the
Kronecker delta
In mathematics, the Kronecker delta (named after Leopold Kronecker) is a function of two variables, usually just non-negative integers. The function is 1 if the variables are equal, and 0 otherwise:
\delta_ = \begin
0 &\text i \neq j, \\
1 &\ ...
equals one when
and is zero otherwise. The
comprise a set of three primitive wavevectors or three primitive translation vectors for the reciprocal lattice, each of whose vertices takes the form
, where the
are integers. The reciprocal lattice is also a
Bravais lattice as it is formed by integer combinations of the primitive vectors, that are
,
, and
in this case. Simple algebra then shows that, for any plane wave with a wavevector
on the reciprocal lattice, the total phase shift
between the origin and any point
on the direct lattice is a multiple of
(that can be possibly zero if the multiplier is zero), so the phase of the plane wave with
will essentially be equal for every direct lattice vertex, in conformity with the reciprocal lattice definition above. (Although any wavevector
on the reciprocal lattice does always take this form, this derivation is motivational, rather than rigorous, because it has omitted the proof that no other possibilities exist.)
The
Brillouin zone is a
primitive cell (more specifically a
Wigner–Seitz cell) of the reciprocal lattice, which plays an important role in
solid state physics
Solid-state physics is the study of rigid matter, or solids, through methods such as solid-state chemistry, quantum mechanics, crystallography, electromagnetism, and metallurgy. It is the largest branch of condensed matter physics. Solid-state p ...
due to
Bloch's theorem. In
pure mathematics
Pure mathematics is the study of mathematical concepts independently of any application outside mathematics. These concepts may originate in real-world concerns, and the results obtained may later turn out to be useful for practical applications ...
, the
dual space
In mathematics, any vector space ''V'' has a corresponding dual vector space (or just dual space for short) consisting of all linear forms on ''V,'' together with the vector space structure of pointwise addition and scalar multiplication by cons ...
of
linear form
In mathematics, a linear form (also known as a linear functional, a one-form, or a covector) is a linear mapIn some texts the roles are reversed and vectors are defined as linear maps from covectors to scalars from a vector space to its field (mat ...
s and the
dual lattice provide more abstract generalizations of reciprocal space and the reciprocal lattice.
Mathematical description

Assuming a three-dimensional
Bravais lattice and labelling each lattice vector (a vector indicating a lattice point) by the subscript
as
3-tuple of integers,
:
where
where
is the set of integers and
is a primitive translation vector or shortly primitive vector. Taking a function
where
is a position vector from the origin
to any position, if
follows the periodicity of this lattice, e.g. the function describing the electronic density in an atomic crystal, it is useful to write
as a
multi-dimensional Fourier series
:
where now the subscript
, so this is a triple sum.
As
follows the periodicity of the lattice, translating
by any lattice vector
we get the same value, hence
:
Expressing the above instead in terms of their Fourier series we have
Because equality of two Fourier series implies equality of their coefficients,
, which only holds when
:
where
Mathematically, the reciprocal lattice is the set of all
vectors
, that are
wavevectors of plane waves in the Fourier series of a spatial function whose periodicity is the same as that of a direct lattice as the set of all direct lattice point position vectors
, and
satisfy this equality for all
. Each plane wave in the Fourier series has the same phase (actually can be differed by a multiple of
) at all the lattice point
.
As shown in the section
multi-dimensional Fourier series,
can be chosen in the form of
where
. With this form, the reciprocal lattice as the set of all wavevectors
for the Fourier series of a spatial function which periodicity follows
, is itself a Bravais lattice as it is formed by integer combinations of its own primitive translation vectors
, and the reciprocal of the reciprocal lattice is the original lattice, which reveals the
Pontryagin duality of their respective
vector space
In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set (mathematics), set whose elements, often called vector (mathematics and physics), ''vectors'', can be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called sc ...
s. (There may be other form of
. Any valid form of
results in the same reciprocal lattice.)
Two dimensions
For an infinite two-dimensional lattice, defined by its
primitive vectors
, its reciprocal lattice can be determined by generating its two reciprocal primitive vectors, through the following formulae,
:
where
is an integer and
:
Here
represents a 90 degree
rotation matrix
In linear algebra, a rotation matrix is a transformation matrix that is used to perform a rotation (mathematics), rotation in Euclidean space. For example, using the convention below, the matrix
:R = \begin
\cos \theta & -\sin \theta \\
\sin \t ...
, i.e. a ''q''uarter turn. The anti-clockwise rotation and the clockwise rotation can both be used to determine the reciprocal lattice: If
is the anti-clockwise rotation and
is the clockwise rotation,
for all vectors
. Thus, using the
permutation
In mathematics, a permutation of a set can mean one of two different things:
* an arrangement of its members in a sequence or linear order, or
* the act or process of changing the linear order of an ordered set.
An example of the first mean ...
:
we obtain
:
Notably, in a 3D space this 2D reciprocal lattice is an infinitely extended set of Bragg rods—described by Sung et al.
Three dimensions
For an infinite three-dimensional lattice
, defined by its
primitive vectors
and the subscript of integers
, its reciprocal lattice
with the integer subscript
can be determined by generating its three reciprocal primitive vectors
where
is the
scalar triple product. The choice of these
is to satisfy
as the known condition (There may be other condition.) of
primitive translation vectors for the reciprocal lattice derived in the
heuristic approach above and the section
multi-dimensional Fourier series. This choice also satisfies the requirement of the reciprocal lattice
mathematically derived
above. Using column vector representation of (reciprocal) primitive vectors, the formulae above can be rewritten using
matrix inversion:
:
This method appeals to the definition, and allows generalization to arbitrary dimensions. The cross product formula dominates introductory materials on crystallography.
The above definition is called the "physics" definition, as the factor of
comes naturally from the study of periodic structures. An essentially equivalent definition, the "crystallographer's" definition, comes from defining the reciprocal lattice
. which changes the reciprocal primitive vectors to be
:
and so on for the other primitive vectors. The crystallographer's definition has the advantage that the definition of
is just the reciprocal magnitude of
in the direction of
, dropping the factor of
. This can simplify certain mathematical manipulations, and expresses reciprocal lattice dimensions in units of
spatial frequency. It is a matter of taste which definition of the lattice is used, as long as the two are not mixed.
is conventionally written as
or
, called
Miller indices;
is replaced with
,
replaced with
, and
replaced with
. Each lattice point
in the reciprocal lattice corresponds to a set of lattice planes
in the
real space lattice. (A lattice plane is a plane crossing lattice points.) The direction of the reciprocal lattice vector corresponds to the
normal to the real space planes. The magnitude of the reciprocal lattice vector
is given in
reciprocal length and is equal to the reciprocal of the interplanar spacing of the real space planes.
Higher dimensions
The formula for
dimensions can be derived assuming an
-
dimensional real vector space
with a
basis and an inner product
. The reciprocal lattice vectors are uniquely determined by the formula
. Using the
permutation
In mathematics, a permutation of a set can mean one of two different things:
* an arrangement of its members in a sequence or linear order, or
* the act or process of changing the linear order of an ordered set.
An example of the first mean ...
:
they can be determined with the following formula:
:
Here,
is the
volume form,
is the inverse of the vector space isomorphism
defined by
and
denotes the
inner multiplication.
One can verify that this formula is equivalent to the known formulas for the two- and three-dimensional case by using the following facts: In three dimensions,
and in two dimensions,
, where
is the
rotation
Rotation or rotational/rotary motion is the circular movement of an object around a central line, known as an ''axis of rotation''. A plane figure can rotate in either a clockwise or counterclockwise sense around a perpendicular axis intersect ...
by 90 degrees (just like the volume form, the angle assigned to a rotation depends on the choice of orientation).
Reciprocal lattices of various crystals
Reciprocal lattices for the
cubic crystal system
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.
There are three main varieties o ...
are as follows.
Simple cubic lattice
The simple cubic
Bravais lattice, with cubic
primitive cell of side
, has for its reciprocal a simple cubic lattice with a cubic primitive cell of side
(or
in the crystallographer's definition). The cubic lattice is therefore said to be self-dual, having the same symmetry in reciprocal space as in real space.
Face-centered cubic (FCC) lattice
The reciprocal lattice to an FCC lattice is the body-centered cubic (BCC) lattice, with a cube side of
.
Consider an FCC compound unit cell. Locate a primitive unit cell of the FCC; i.e., a unit cell with one lattice point. Now take one of the vertices of the primitive unit cell as the origin. Give the basis vectors of the real lattice. Then from the known formulae, you can calculate the basis vectors of the reciprocal lattice. These reciprocal lattice vectors of the FCC represent the basis vectors of a BCC real lattice. The basis vectors of a real BCC lattice and the reciprocal lattice of an FCC resemble each other in direction but not in magnitude.
Body-centered cubic (BCC) lattice
The reciprocal lattice to a
BCC lattice is the
FCC lattice, with a cube side of
.
It can be proven that only the Bravais lattices which have 90 degrees between
(cubic, tetragonal, orthorhombic) have primitive translation vectors for the reciprocal lattice,
, parallel to their real-space vectors.
Simple hexagonal lattice
The reciprocal to a simple hexagonal Bravais lattice with
lattice constants and
is another simple hexagonal lattice with lattice constants
and
rotated through 90° about the ''c'' axis with respect to the direct lattice. The simple hexagonal lattice is therefore said to be self-dual, having the same symmetry in reciprocal space as in real space. Primitive translation vectors for this simple hexagonal Bravais lattice vectors are
Arbitrary collection of atoms

One path to the reciprocal lattice of an arbitrary collection of atoms comes from the idea of scattered waves in the
Fraunhofer (long-distance or lens back-focal-plane) limit as a
Huygens-style sum of amplitudes from all points of scattering (in this case from each individual atom).
[B. E. Warren (1969/1990) ''X-ray diffraction'' (Addison-Wesley, Reading MA/Dover, Mineola NY).] This sum is denoted by the
complex amplitude in the equation below, because it is also the Fourier transform (as a function of spatial frequency or reciprocal distance) of an effective scattering potential in direct space:
:
Here g = q/(2) is the scattering vector q in crystallographer units, ''N'' is the number of atoms, ''f''
''j'' ''gis the
atomic scattering factor for atom ''j'' and scattering vector g, while r
''j'' is the vector position of atom ''j''. The Fourier phase depends on one's choice of coordinate origin.
For the special case of an infinite periodic crystal, the scattered amplitude ''F'' = ''M'' ''F
h,k,ℓ'' from ''M'' unit cells (as in the cases above) turns out to be non-zero only for integer values of
, where
:
when there are ''j'' = 1,''m'' atoms inside the unit cell whose fractional lattice indices are respectively . To consider effects due to finite crystal size, of course, a shape convolution for each point or the equation above for a finite lattice must be used instead.
Whether the array of atoms is finite or infinite, one can also imagine an "intensity reciprocal lattice" I
''g which relates to the amplitude lattice F via the usual relation ''I'' = ''F''
*''F'' where ''F''
* is the complex conjugate of F. Since Fourier transformation is reversible, of course, this act of conversion to intensity tosses out "all except 2nd moment" (i.e. the phase) information. For the case of an arbitrary collection of atoms, the intensity reciprocal lattice is therefore:
:
Here r
''jk'' is the vector separation between atom ''j'' and atom ''k''. One can also use this to predict the effect of nano-crystallite shape, and subtle changes in beam orientation, on detected diffraction peaks even if in some directions the cluster is only one atom thick. On the down side, scattering calculations using the reciprocal lattice basically consider an incident plane wave. Thus after a first look at reciprocal lattice (kinematic scattering) effects, beam broadening and multiple scattering (i.e.
dynamical) effects may be important to consider as well.
Generalization of a dual lattice
There are actually two versions in
mathematics
Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
of the abstract dual lattice concept, for a given
lattice ''L'' in a real vector space ''V'', of
finite dimension.
The first, which generalises directly the reciprocal lattice construction, uses
Fourier analysis. It may be stated simply in terms of
Pontryagin duality. The
dual group ''V''^ to ''V'' is again a real vector space, and its closed subgroup ''L''^ dual to ''L'' turns out to be a lattice in ''V''^. Therefore, ''L''^ is the natural candidate for ''dual lattice'', in a different vector space (of the same dimension).
The other aspect is seen in the presence of a
quadratic form
In mathematics, a quadratic form is a polynomial with terms all of degree two (" form" is another name for a homogeneous polynomial). For example,
4x^2 + 2xy - 3y^2
is a quadratic form in the variables and . The coefficients usually belong t ...
''Q'' on ''V''; if it is
non-degenerate it allows an identification of the
dual space
In mathematics, any vector space ''V'' has a corresponding dual vector space (or just dual space for short) consisting of all linear forms on ''V,'' together with the vector space structure of pointwise addition and scalar multiplication by cons ...
''V''
* of ''V'' with ''V''. The relation of ''V''
* to ''V'' is not intrinsic; it depends on a choice of
Haar measure
In mathematical analysis, the Haar measure assigns an "invariant volume" to subsets of locally compact topological groups, consequently defining an integral for functions on those groups.
This Measure (mathematics), measure was introduced by Alfr� ...
(volume element) on ''V''. But given an identification of the two, which is in any case
well-defined up to a
scalar, the presence of ''Q'' allows one to speak to the dual lattice to ''L'' while staying within ''V''.
In mathematics, the dual lattice of a given
lattice ''L'' in an
abelian locally compact topological group
In mathematics, topological groups are the combination of groups and topological spaces, i.e. they are groups and topological spaces at the same time, such that the continuity condition for the group operations connects these two structures ...
''G'' is the subgroup ''L''
∗ of the
dual group of ''G'' consisting of all continuous characters that are equal to one at each point of ''L''.
In
discrete mathematics
Discrete mathematics is the study of mathematical structures that can be considered "discrete" (in a way analogous to discrete variables, having a bijection with the set of natural numbers) rather than "continuous" (analogously to continuous f ...
, a lattice is a locally discrete set of points described by all integral linear combinations of linearly independent vectors in R
''n''. The dual lattice is then defined by all points in the linear span of the original lattice (typically all of R
''n'') with the property that an integer results from the inner product with all elements of the original lattice. It follows that the dual of the dual lattice is the original lattice.
Furthermore, if we allow the
matrix ''B'' to have columns as the linearly independent vectors that describe the lattice, then the matrix
has columns of vectors that describe the dual lattice.
In quantum physics
In
quantum physics
Quantum mechanics is the fundamental physical Scientific theory, theory that describes the behavior of matter and of light; its unusual characteristics typically occur at and below the scale of atoms. Reprinted, Addison-Wesley, 1989, It is ...
, reciprocal space is closely related to ''
momentum space'' according to the proportionality
, where
is the
momentum vector and
is the
reduced Planck constant.
See also
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
References
External links
* http://newton.umsl.edu/run//nano/known.html –
Jmol-based electron diffraction simulator lets you explore the intersection between reciprocal lattice and Ewald sphere during tilt.
DoITPoMS Teaching and Learning Package on Reciprocal Space and the Reciprocal Lattice
{{DEFAULTSORT:Reciprocal Lattice
Crystallography
Fourier analysis
Lattice points
Neutron-related techniques
Synchrotron-related techniques
Diffraction
Condensed matter physics