Chapter 21: Crystal Structure and Reciprocal Lattice (Set-5)

In BCC, the planar atomic density is highest on which plane

A (100) plane
B (110) plane
C (111) plane
D (210) plane

In FCC, the planar atomic density is highest on which plane

A (100) plane
B (110) plane
C (210) plane
D (111) plane

In FCC, the close-packed direction within the close-packed plane is

A ⟨100⟩ direction
B ⟨111⟩ direction
C ⟨110⟩ direction
D ⟨210⟩ direction

In BCC, the shortest lattice translation direction (nearest neighbor direction) is

A ⟨100⟩ direction
B ⟨111⟩ direction
C ⟨110⟩ direction
D ⟨210⟩ direction

In BCC diffraction, the first three allowed N = (h²+k²+l²) values are

A 2,4,6
B 1,2,3
C 2,4,8
D 3,4,8

In FCC diffraction, the first three allowed N values are

A 1,2,3
B 2,4,6
C 4,5,6
D 3,4,8

A cubic powder pattern shows sin²θ ratios 2:4:6:8. The lattice type is most likely

A Simple cubic
B Body centered cubic
C Face centered cubic
D Hexagonal close packed

A cubic powder pattern shows sin²θ ratios 3:4:8:11. The lattice type is most likely

A Simple cubic
B Body centered cubic
C Face centered cubic
D Diamond cubic

For a diatomic basis at (0,0,0) and (1/2,1/2,1/2) with equal form factors, reflections vanish when

A h+k+l even
B h, k, l mixed
C h=k=l only
D h+k+l odd

For a diatomic basis with unequal form factors f₁ and f₂ at (0,0,0) and (1/2,1/2,1/2), forbidden BCC reflections become

A Weakly allowed
B Always absent
C Always strongest
D Angle independent

In the Ewald sphere method, increasing wavelength λ makes the Ewald sphere radius

A Increase
B Stay same
C Decrease
D Become infinite

If lattice constant a increases, reciprocal lattice spacing in k-space

A Increases
B Decreases
C Stays same
D Becomes zero

A zone boundary plane in k-space is where Bragg reflection occurs for electrons when

A k = 0
B k·G = 0
C G = 0
D 2k = G

The first Brillouin zone of a simple cubic reciprocal lattice has the shape of a

A Octahedron
B Cube
C Dodecahedron
D Tetrahedron

The first Brillouin zone of an FCC reciprocal lattice is a

A Rhombic dodecahedron
B Cube
C Truncated octahedron
D Regular octahedron

The first Brillouin zone of a BCC reciprocal lattice is a

A Cube shape
B Rhombic dodecahedron
C Regular octahedron
D Truncated octahedron

For cubic crystals, the zone axis [uvw] is perpendicular to plane (hkl) only when

A u=v=w
B u+h=0
C (uvw) = (hkl)
D u=v only

In cubic crystals, the angle between planes (h1k1l1) and (h2k2l2) depends on

A Atomic number
B Dot product of normals
C Packing fraction
D Debye factor only

The d-spacing in tetragonal crystals depends on

A Only a
B Only c
C Only angles
D Both a and c

If a cubic sample shows peak broadening increasing strongly at high angles, likely cause is

A Only size effect
B Only absorption
C Microstrain effect
D Only multiplicity

In powder diffraction, why are intensities corrected using Lorentz-polarization factor

A Fix peak positions
B Fix geometric bias
C Fix peak widths
D Fix lattice constants

For a crystal with basis atoms at (0,0,0) and (1/4,1/4,1/4), phase factor includes

A exp(iπh)
B exp[i2π(h+k)]
C exp(iπkl)
D exp[i(π/2)(h+k+l)]

In a two-atom basis crystal, a systematic absence can occur even if lattice is simple because

A Basis cancels waves
B Bragg law fails
C λ becomes zero
D d becomes infinite

If a powder pattern fits FCC selection rules but some allowed peaks are extremely weak, a likely reason is

A Wrong wavelength
B Grain boundaries only
C Form factor drop
D Coordination number

The reciprocal lattice is most directly used to find

A Coordination number
B Diffraction spot positions
C Packing fraction
D Vacancy count

In cubic crystals, a reflection with indices (hkl) corresponds to reciprocal vector magnitude proportional to

A a/√(h²+k²+l²)
B (h+k+l)/a
C a(hkl)
D √(h²+k²+l²)/a

If a crystal is rotated, which changes most directly in Ewald construction

A |k| magnitude
B X-ray wavelength
C Reciprocal lattice orientation
D Unit cell volume

In Laue diffraction, multiple spots appear mainly because

A Many crystal grains
B Many wavelengths present
C No Bragg condition
D Only defects scatter

The condition for systematic absence in FCC can be derived by summing phase factors at lattice points

A Four face points
B One point only
C Two body points
D Eight corners

A peak indexed as (311) in FCC is allowed because

A All even indices
B Mixed parity indices
C h+k+l odd
D All odd indices

In BCC, (222) is allowed and compared to (111) of simple cubic, it appears because

A BCC allows odd sums
B BCC has only corners
C BCC forbids odd sums
D BCC has face centers

If a reciprocal lattice point is farther from origin, the corresponding real-space plane spacing is

A Larger spacing
B Smaller spacing
C Same spacing
D Undefined always

The most common cause of “extra” weak peaks in alloy XRD beyond fundamental peaks is

A Detector noise only
B Packing fraction change
C Coordination change
D Superlattice ordering

If a reflection is forbidden by centering but appears weakly, a likely physical reason is

A Different basis atoms
B Absorption change
C Lattice constant error
D Multiplicity error

A key difference between Bravais lattice and crystal structure is that crystal structure includes

A Only translations
B Only symmetry points
C Atomic basis
D Only reciprocal vectors

In reciprocal lattice terms, Bragg’s law is equivalent to conservation of

A Mass and charge
B Wavevector change
C Crystal temperature
D Unit cell volume

The Scherrer equation may overestimate size if peak broadening includes

A Only lattice constant
B Only multiplicity
C Only absorption
D Instrument broadening

For cubic indexing, which quantity should be constant across peaks for a correct a value

A sinθ only
B intensity ratio only
C a from each peak
D form factor only

A typical sign of zero-shift error in powder XRD is that calculated lattice constant

A Decreases with θ
B Increases with θ
C Constant with θ
D Random only

In reciprocal space, smaller wavelength allows access to

A Smaller |G| only
B Only zone center
C Only low angles
D Larger |G| points

For an HCP lattice, the reciprocal lattice is

A Hexagonal type
B Cubic always
C BCC type
D FCC type

A crystallographic direction in hexagonal lattice uses four-index notation because it

A Changes Bragg law
B Separates basal axes
C Removes all negatives
D Matches cubic only

The “zone axis rule” relates a plane (hkl) in a zone [uvw] by

A hu+kv+lw=1
B hu+kv+lw=2
C h+k+l=0
D hu+kv+lw=0

If two planes (h1k1l1) and (h2k2l2) intersect, the zone axis direction is along

A Their dot product
B Sum of indices
C Their cross product
D Difference of indices

In BCC, the most common slip plane is not close-packed, so plasticity is harder mainly because

A Coordination too low
B No close-packed planes
C No diffraction peaks
D d-spacings vanish

The main reason FCC metals are very ductile is that they have

A Many easy slip systems
B Only one slip system
C No grain boundaries
D Zero vacancies

In diffraction, “structure factor link to basis” means basis determines

A Peak positions
B Lattice constants
C Bragg angles only
D Peak intensities

For a given lattice, changing X-ray wavelength changes

A Reciprocal lattice points
B Crystal symmetry
C Ewald sphere size
D Miller indices set

A key limitation of simple Bragg peak indexing is that peak overlap becomes serious when

A Few peaks exist
B Many phases present
C Crystal is perfect
D λ is very large

If a crystal has strong preferred orientation in powder XRD, the pattern mainly shows

A Wrong peak positions
B Wrong lattice constants
C No peaks at all
D Wrong peak intensities

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