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Phys. Rev. 152, 774–779 (1966)

Relationship between the Macroscopic and Microscopic Theory of Crystal Elasticity. I. Primitive Crystals

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P. N. Keating
Bendix Research Laboratories, Southfield, Michigan

Received 25 July 1966; published in the issue dated December 1966

The general relationship between the macroscopic theory of crystal elasticity and a recently introduced microscopic formalism is established for primitive crystals. The relationship is more simple and direct than the corresponding relationship between the macroscopic theory and the Born-Huang formalism, which has to be established via sound-wave propagation. Additional conditions are derived for the Born-Huang formalism which remove an inconsistency in the microscopic theory and confirm that purely nearest-neighbor interactions must be central. The new macroscopic-microscopic relationship is applied to an illustrative study of the simple cubic structure which also shows that three of the six third-order elastic constants of the alkali halides depend on long-range interactions.

© 1966 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRev.152.774
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRev.152.774
PACS:

See Also

See Also: P. N. Keating, Relationship between the Macroscopic and Microscopic Theory of Crystal Elasticity. II. Nonprimitive Crystals, Phys. Rev. 169, 758 (1968).