Fragmentary and incidental behaviour of columns, slabs and crystals

Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci. 2013 Dec 30;372(2008):20120032. doi: 10.1098/rsta.2012.0032. Print 2014 Feb 13.

Abstract

Between the study of small finite frameworks and infinite incidentally periodic frameworks, we find the real materials which are large, but finite, fragments that fit into the infinite periodic frameworks. To understand these materials, we seek insights from both (i) their analysis as large frameworks with associated geometric and combinatorial properties (including the geometric repetitions) and (ii) embedding them into appropriate infinite periodic structures with motions that may break the periodic structure. A review of real materials identifies a number of examples with a local appearance of 'unit cells' which repeat under isometries but perhaps in unusual forms. These examples also refocus attention on several new classes of infinite 'periodic' frameworks: (i) columns--three-dimensional structures generated with one repeating isometry and (ii) slabs--three-dimensional structures with two independent repeating translations. With this larger vision of structures to be studied, we find some patterns and partial results that suggest new conjectures as well as many additional open questions. These invite a search for new examples and additional theorems.

Keywords: finite frameworks; flexibility; fragments; infinite frameworks; rigidity.