Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised May 27, 2026

Rectangular lattice

The rectangular lattice and centered rectangular lattice constitute two of the five two-dimensional Bravais lattice types. The symmetry categories of these lattices are wallpaper groups pmm and cmm respectively. The conventional translation vectors of the rectangular lattices form an angle of 90° and are of unequal lengths.

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Rectangular lattices
Primitive Centered
pmm cmm

The rectangular lattice and centered rectangular lattice (or rhombic lattice) constitute two of the five two-dimensional Bravais lattice types.1 The symmetry categories of these lattices are wallpaper groups pmm and cmm respectively. The conventional translation vectors of the rectangular lattices form an angle of 90° and are of unequal lengths.

Bravais lattices

There are two rectangular Bravais lattices: primitive rectangular and centered rectangular (or rhombic).

Rectangular vs rhombic unit cells for the 2D rectangular lattices. source ↗
Bravais lattice Rectangular Centered rectangular
Pearson symbol op oc
Standard unit cell
Rhombic unit cell

The primitive rectangular lattice can also be described by a centered rhombic unit cell, while the centered rectangular lattice can also be described by a primitive rhombic unit cell. Note that the length a {\displaystyle a} in the lower row is not the same as in the upper row. For the first column above, a {\displaystyle a} of the second row equals a 2 + b 2 {\displaystyle {\sqrt {a^{2}+b^{2}}}} of the first row, and for the second column it equals 1 2 a 2 + b 2 {\displaystyle {\frac {1}{2}}{\sqrt {a^{2}+b^{2}}}} .

Crystal classes

The rectangular lattice class names, Schönflies notation, Hermann-Mauguin notation, orbifold notation, Coxeter notation, and wallpaper groups are listed in the table below.

Geometric class, point group Arithmetic
class
Wallpaper groups
Schön. Intl Orb. Cox.
D1 m (*) [ ] Along pm
(**)
pg
(××)
Between cm
(*×)
 
D2 2mm (*22) [2] Along pmm
(*2222)
pmg
(22*)
Between cmm
(2*22)
pgg
(22×)
References

References

  1. Rana, Farhan. "Lattices in 1D, 2D, and 3D" (PDF). Cornell University. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2020-12-18.