A primitive cell (also known as a simple cell) is a unit cell that contains only one lattice point. This lattice point is considered to be at the corners of a 3D unit cell. In other words, each corner of the primitive unit cell is shared by 8 adjacent unit cells. Since the corners are shared, the total number of lattice points contributed by each of the 8 corners is:
\(8 \times \frac{1}{8} = 1\)
Therefore, a primitive cell contains only one lattice point per unit cell. Simple cubic structures are examples of primitive cells.
In contrast, body-centered and face-centered unit cells have more than one lattice point per unit cell since there are lattice points at the cell centers or faces as well as the corners.
| List-I | List-II |
| (A) XeF2 | (iii) Linear |
| (B) BF3 | (i) Trigonal Planar |
| (C) XeF4 | (ii) Distorted Octahedral |
| (D) SF6 | (iv) Regular Octahedral |
| List-I | List-II |
|---|---|
| (A) Linus Pauling | (iii) Electronegativity |
| (B) Albert Einstein | (ii) Photoelectric effect |
| (C) Ernest Rutherford | (i) Alpha particle scattering experiment |
| (D) Max Planck | (iv) Black body radiations |
| List-I | List-II |
|---|---|
| (A) Lyman | (i) n = 2, 3, 4, ... |
| (B) Balmer | (ii) n = 3, 4, 5, ... |
| (C) Paschen | (iii) n = 4, 5, 6, ... |
| (D) Bracket | (iv) n = 5, 6, 7, ... |