Hexagonal lattice


The hexagonal lattice or triangular lattice is one of the five 2D lattice types.
Three nearby points form an equilateral triangle. In images, four orientations of such a triangle are by far the most common. They can conveniently be referred to by viewing the triangle as an arrow, as pointing up, down, to the left, or to the right; although in each case they could also be considered to point into two oblique directions.
Two orientations of an image of the lattice are by far the most common. They can conveniently be referred to as "hexagonal lattice with horizontal rows", with triangles pointing up and down, and "hexagonal lattice with vertical rows", with triangles pointing left and right. They differ by an angle of 30°.
The hexagonal lattice with horizontal rows is a special case of a centered rectangular grid, with rectangles which are times as high as wide. Of course for the other orientation the rectangles are times as wide as high.
Its symmetry category is wallpaper group p6m. A pattern with this lattice of translational symmetry cannot have more, but may have less symmetry than the lattice itself.
, honeycomb structure. The centers of the hexagons form a hexagonal lattice with vertical rows; for each color the centers of the hexagons of that color form a hexagonal lattice with horizontal rows which is in linear scale times as large. The vertices of all hexagons together with their centers form a hexagonal lattice with horizontal rows which is in linear scale times as small as the first-mentioned lattice.
For an image of a honeycomb structure, again two orientations are by far the most common. They can conveniently be referred to as "honeycomb structure with horizontal rows", with hexagons with two vertical sides, and "honeycomb structure with vertical rows", with hexagons with two horizontal sides. They differ by an angle of 90°, or equivalently 30°.
A honeycomb structure is in two ways related to a hexagonal lattice:
The ratio of the number of vertices and the number of hexagons is 2, so together with the centers the ratio is 3, the reciprocal of the square of the scale factor.
The term honeycomb lattice could mean a corresponding hexagonal lattice, or a structure which is not a lattice in the group sense, but e.g. one in the sense of a lattice model. A set of points forming the vertices of a honeycomb shows the honeycomb structure. It can be seen as the union of two offset triangular lattices, shown here red and blue.

2 triangular lattices

3 triangular lattices

A triangular lattice itself can be divided into 3 offset triangular lattices, shown above in red, green and blue. A triangular lattice is also called an A2 lattice, A2, and the union of three triangular lattices is A*2.
In addition to these points, or instead of them, the sides of the hexagons may be shown; depending on application they may be called lattice bonds.
With respect to a hexagonal lattice we can distinguish two sets or three directions:

Within each set of directions the directions differ by an angle of 60°, and between sets by angles of 30° and 90°. For a hexagonal lattice with horizontal rows one of the three directions is horizontal, and for a hexagonal lattice with vertical rows one of the three directions is vertical.
Conversely, for a given lattice we can create a rotated lattice that is times as fine by adding the centers of the equilateral triangles. Since there are twice as many triangles as vertices, this triples the number of vertices.
A pattern with 3- or 6-fold rotational symmetry has a lattice of 3-fold rotocenters that is this finer lattice relative to the lattice of translational symmetry.
In the case of 6-fold rotational symmetry the 6-fold centers form a lattice as coarse as the lattice of translational symmetry, i.e. there is one 6-fold center and there are two 3-fold centers per primitive cell.
For reflection axes, there are two possible sets of directions, mentioned above. In the case of 3-fold symmetry either none or one of the two applies:
In the 6-fold case either none or both apply.
If there are reflection axes in the main translation directions, one of the three sets of rotocenters play a different role than the other two: these reflection axes pass through them. With p6 one set is special because of being 6-fold.
, an example of p6 and p6m ; the lines are reflection axes if colors are ignored, and a special kind of symmetry axis if colors are not ignored: reflection reverts the colors. Rectangular line grids in three orientations can be distinguished.