In
geometry
Geometry (; ) is a branch of mathematics concerned with properties of space such as the distance, shape, size, and relative position of figures. Geometry is, along with arithmetic, one of the oldest branches of mathematics. A mathematician w ...
, tetrahedron packing is the problem of arranging identical regular
tetrahedra
In geometry, a tetrahedron (: tetrahedra or tetrahedrons), also known as a triangular pyramid, is a polyhedron composed of four triangular Face (geometry), faces, six straight Edge (geometry), edges, and four vertex (geometry), vertices. The tet ...
throughout three-dimensional space so as to fill the maximum possible fraction of space.

Currently, the best lower bound achieved on the optimal
packing fraction of regular tetrahedra is 85.63%.
[
] Tetrahedra do not
tile
Tiles are usually thin, square or rectangular coverings manufactured from hard-wearing material such as ceramic, Rock (geology), stone, metal, baked clay, or even glass. They are generally fixed in place in an array to cover roofs, floors, wal ...
space, and an upper bound below 100% (namely, 1 โ (2.6...)ยท10
โ25) has been reported.
Historical results
Aristotle
Aristotle (; 384โ322 BC) was an Ancient Greek philosophy, Ancient Greek philosopher and polymath. His writings cover a broad range of subjects spanning the natural sciences, philosophy, linguistics, economics, politics, psychology, a ...
claimed that tetrahedra could fill space completely.
In 2006,
Conway
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and Torquato showed that a packing fraction about 72% can be obtained by constructing a non-Bravais lattice packing of tetrahedra (with multiple particles with generally different orientations per repeating unit), and thus they showed that the best tetrahedron packing cannot be a lattice packing (with one particle per repeating unit such that each particle has a common orientation). These packing constructions almost doubled the optimal Bravais-lattice-packing fraction 36.73% obtained by Hoylman. In 2007 and 2010, Chaikin and coworkers experimentally showed that tetrahedron-like dice can randomly pack in a finite container up to a packing fraction between 75% and 76%. In 2008, Chen was the first to propose a packing of hard, regular tetrahedra that packed more densely than spheres, demonstrating numerically a packing fraction of 77.86%. A further improvement was made in 2009 by Torquato and Jiao, who compressed Chen's structure using a computer algorithm to a packing fraction of 78.2021%.
In mid-2009 Haji-Akbari et al. showed, using
MC simulations of initially random systems that at packing densities >50% an equilibrium fluid of hard tetrahedra spontaneously transforms to a dodecagonal
quasicrystal
A quasiperiodicity, quasiperiodic crystal, or quasicrystal, is a structure that is Order and disorder (physics), ordered but not Bravais lattice, periodic. A quasicrystalline pattern can continuously fill all available space, but it lacks trans ...
, which can be compressed to 83.24%. They also reported a glassy, disordered packing at densities exceeding 78%. For a periodic approximant to a quasicrystal with an 82-tetrahedron unit cell, they obtained a packing density as high as 85.03%.
In late 2009, a new, much simpler family of packings with a packing fraction of 85.47% was discovered by Kallus, Elser, and Gravel. These packings were also the basis of a slightly improved packing obtained by Torquato and Jiao at the end of 2009 with a packing fraction of 85.55%, and by Chen, Engel, and Glotzer in early 2010 with a packing fraction of 85.63%.
The Chen, Engel and Glotzer result currently stands as the densest known packing of hard, regular tetrahedra. Surprisingly, the square-triangle tiling
packs denser than this
double lattice of
triangular bipyramid
A triangular bipyramid is a hexahedron with six triangular faces constructed by attaching two tetrahedra face-to-face. The same shape is also known as a triangular dipyramid or trigonal bipyramid. If these tetrahedra are regular, all faces of a t ...
s when tetrahedra are slightly rounded (the
Minkowski sum
In geometry, the Minkowski sum of two sets of position vectors ''A'' and ''B'' in Euclidean space is formed by adding each vector in ''A'' to each vector in ''B'':
A + B = \
The Minkowski difference (also ''Minkowski subtraction'', ''Minkowsk ...
of a tetrahedron and a sphere), making the 82-tetrahedron crystal the largest unit cell for a densest packing of identical particles to date.
Relationship to other packing problems
Because the earliest lower bound known for packings of tetrahedra was less than that of
spheres
The Synchronized Position Hold Engage and Reorient Experimental Satellite (SPHERES) are a series of miniaturized satellites developed by MIT's Space Systems Laboratory for NASA and US Military, to be used as a low-risk, extensible test bed for t ...
, it was suggested that the regular tetrahedra might be a counterexample to
Ulam's conjecture that the optimal density for
packing congruent spheres is smaller than that for any other convex body. However, the more recent results have shown that this is not the case.
See also
*
Packing problem
Packing problems are a class of optimization problems in mathematics that involve attempting to pack objects together into containers. The goal is to either pack a single container as densely as possible or pack all objects using as few conta ...
*
Disphenoid tetrahedral honeycomb - an
isohedral packing of irregular tetrahedra in 3-space.
* The
triakis truncated tetrahedral honeycomb
The triakis truncated tetrahedral honeycomb is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space made up of triakis truncated tetrahedra. It was discovered in 1914.
Voronoi tessellation
It is the Voronoi tessellation of the ca ...
is
cell-transitive
In geometry, a tessellation of dimension (a plane tiling) or higher, or a polytope of dimension (a polyhedron) or higher, is isohedral or face-transitive if all its faces are the same. More specifically, all faces must be not merely congruen ...
and based on a regular tetrahedron.
References
External links
Packing Tetrahedrons, and Closing in on a Perfect Fit NYTimes
Efficient shapes The Economist
New Scientist
{{Packing problem
History of geometry
Packing problems
Tetrahedra