Niles said:
Hi
When talking about crystals, then what is a "conventional cell"? I know what a primitive cell is, but not what a conventional cell is.
E.g. see this: http://www.scribd.com/doc/91701/Crystal-Lattices
Here they do not describe a conventional cell, but just mention the name.
The cubes shown in the picture in the section on convetional cells are conventional cells. The shaded regions are primitive cells. The conventional cells are larger than the primitive cell, and they contain more than one atom (unlike the primitive cell, which in the picture contains one cell).
Basically, a conventional cell is any cell which, when repeated along "conventional lattice vectors", makes up the lattice, but is not the primitive cell---i.e., contains more atoms than the primitive cell.
People usually choose to discuss a lattice in terms of a conventional cell rather than a primitive cell because the conventional cell is usually easier to describe (e.g., a simple cube)... of course, the downside is that now the conventional basis (set of atoms in the cell) is harder to describe.
For example, we can either use a simple cubic conventional cell (conventional lattice vectors (a,0,0),(0,a,0),(0,0,a)) and a four atom basis ((0,0,0),(a/2,a/2,0),(0,a/2,a/2),(a/2,0,a/2)) to describe an fcc lattice. Or, we can use the primitive cell (with primitive lattice vectors (0,a/2,a/2),(a/2,0,a/2),(a/2,a/2,0)) and a single atom basis.