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Law of the constancy of interfacial angles

From Online Dictionary of Crystallography

Revision as of 18:04, 14 November 2017 by BrianMcMahon (talk | contribs) (Tidied translations and corrected Spanish (U. Mueller))

Loi de la constance des angles dièdres (Fr). Gesetz der Winkelkonstanz (Ge). Legge della costanza dell'angolo diedro (It). Ley de la constancia de los ángulos diedros (Sp).


Definition

The law of the constancy of interfacial angles (or 'first law of crystallography') states that the angles between the crystal faces of a given species are constant, whatever the lateral extension of these faces and the origin of the crystal, and are characteristic of that species. It paved the way for Haüy's law of rational indices.

History

The law of the constancy of interfacial angles was first observed by the Danish physician Nicolas Steno (he was the personal doctor of the Grand Duke of Florence) on quartz crystals (De solido intra solidum naturaliter contento, Florence, 1669), and also by Domenico Guglielmini (Riflessioni filosofiche dedotte dalle figure de Sali, Bologna, 1688), but it was generalized and firmly established by Jean-Baptiste Romé de l'Isle (Cristallographie, Paris, 1783) who measured accurately the interfacial angles of a great variety of crystals, using the goniometer designed by Arnould Carangeot (1783).