polyedreen
Polyedreen is a term used in geometry to denote a class of space-filling polyhedra, i.e., polyhedra that can tessellate three-dimensional Euclidean space by copies of themselves with no gaps or overlaps. The concept emphasizes the cell as the fundamental unit in a polyhedral honeycomb and is used to study how different polyhedra can tile space and what symmetries such tilings exhibit. The name combines “polyhedron” with the -een suffix common in naming geometric forms.
In a polyedreen tiling, the faces of each cell are polygons that meet at edges and vertices
Applications of polyedreen theory appear in crystallography, materials science, architecture, and computer graphics, where tilings by
See also: polyhedron, tessellation, honeycomb, uniform tiling, symmetry group. References to historical work by Kepler and