cornersharing
Corner sharing is a mode of structural linkage in crystalline solids where adjacent coordination polyhedra are joined at a single vertex, or corner, typically via a shared oxide atom. This contrasts with edge sharing, where polyhedra share an entire edge, and face sharing, where they share a full face. Corner sharing is especially common in oxide and silicate minerals, where silicon-oxygen tetrahedra (SiO4) connect through corners to build extended networks.
In silicates, corner-sharing tetrahedra form three-dimensional frameworks as seen in quartz and many feldspars. Zeolites rely
The mode of sharing influences material properties. Corner-sharing networks tend to produce highly connected yet relatively
In crystallography and mineralogy, identifying whether polyhedra share corners, edges, or faces helps describe the topology