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Triangular prismatic honeycomb

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Triangular prismatic honeycomb
Type Uniform honeycomb
Schläfli symbol {3,6}×{∞} or t0,3{3,6,2,∞}
Coxeter diagrams

Space group
Coxeter notation
[6,3,2,∞]
[3[3],2,∞]
[(3[3])+,2,∞]
Dual Hexagonal prismatic honeycomb
Properties vertex-transitive

The triangular prismatic honeycomb or triangular prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed entirely of triangular prisms.

It is constructed from a triangular tiling extruded into prisms.

It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs.

It consists of 1 + 6 + 1 = 8 edges meeting at a vertex, There are 6 triangular prism cells meeting at an edge and faces are shared between 2 cells.

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Hexagonal prismatic honeycomb

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Hexagonal prismatic honeycomb
Type Uniform honeycomb
Schläfli symbols {6,3}×{∞} or t0,1,3{6,3,2,∞}
Coxeter diagrams


Cell types 4.4.6
Vertex figure triangular bipyramid
Space group
Coxeter notation
[6,3,2,∞]
[3[3],2,∞]
Dual Triangular prismatic honeycomb
Properties vertex-transitive

The hexagonal prismatic honeycomb or hexagonal prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space made up of hexagonal prisms.

It is constructed from a hexagonal tiling extruded into prisms.

It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs.

This honeycomb can be alternated into the gyrated tetrahedral-octahedral honeycomb, with pairs of tetrahedra existing in the alternated gaps (instead of a triangular bipyramid).

There are 1 + 3 + 1 = 5 edges meeting at a vertex, 3 Hexagonal Prism cells meeting at an edge, and faces are shared between 2 cells.


Trihexagonal prismatic honeycomb

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Trihexagonal prismatic honeycomb
Type
Schläfli symbol
Vertex figure
Coxeter diagram
Space group
Coxeter notation
Dual
Properties

The trihexagonal prismatic honeycomb or trihexagonal prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of hexagonal prisms and triangular prisms in a ratio of 1:2.

It is constructed from a trihexagonal tiling extruded into prisms.

It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs.


Truncated hexagonal prismatic honeycomb

[edit]
Truncated hexagonal prismatic honeycomb
Type Uniform honeycomb
Schläfli symbol t{6,3}×{∞} or t0,1,3{6,3,2,∞}
Coxeter diagram
Cell types 4.4.12
3.4.4
Face types {3}, {4}, {12}
Edge figures Square,
Isosceles triangle
Vertex figure Triangular bipyramid
Space group
Coxeter notation
[6,3,2,∞]
Properties vertex-transitive

The truncated hexagonal prismatic honeycomb or tomo-trihexagonal prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of dodecagonal prisms, and triangular prisms in a ratio of 1:2.

It is constructed from a truncated hexagonal tiling extruded into prisms.

It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs.


Rhombitrihexagonal prismatic honeycomb

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Rhombitrihexagonal prismatic honeycomb
Type Uniform honeycomb
Vertex figure Trapezoidal bipyramid
Schläfli symbol rr{6,3}×{∞} or t0,2,3{6,3,2,∞}
s2{3,6}×{∞}
Coxeter diagram
Space group
Coxeter notation
[6,3,2,∞]
Properties vertex-transitive

The rhombitrihexagonal prismatic honeycomb or rhombitrihexagonal prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of hexagonal prisms, cubes, and triangular prisms in a ratio of 1:3:2.

It is constructed from a rhombitrihexagonal tiling extruded into prisms.

It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs.


Truncated trihexagonal prismatic honeycomb

[edit]
Truncated trihexagonal prismatic honeycomb
Type
Schläfli symbol
Coxeter diagram
Space group
Coxeter notation
Vertex figure
Dual
Properties

The truncated trihexagonal prismatic honeycomb or tomo-trihexagonal prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of dodecagonal prisms, hexagonal prisms, and cubes in a ratio of 1:2:3.

It is constructed from a truncated trihexagonal tiling extruded into prisms.

It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs.


Snub trihexagonal prismatic honeycomb

[edit]
Snub trihexagonal prismatic honeycomb
Type Uniform honeycomb
Schläfli symbol sr{6,3}×{∞}
Coxeter diagram
Symmetry [(6,3)+,2,∞]
Properties vertex-transitive

The snub trihexagonal prismatic honeycomb or simo-trihexagonal prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of hexagonal prisms and triangular prisms in a ratio of 1:8.

It is constructed from a snub trihexagonal tiling extruded into prisms.

It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs.


Snub trihexagonal antiprismatic honeycomb

[edit]
Snub trihexagonal antiprismatic honeycomb
Type
Schläfli symbol
Coxeter-Dynkin diagram
Cells
Vertex figure
Symmetry
Properties

A snub trihexagonal antiprismatic honeycomb can be constructed by alternation of the truncated trihexagonal prismatic honeycomb, although it can not be made uniform, but it can be given Coxeter diagram: and has symmetry [6,3,2,∞]+. It makes hexagonal antiprisms from the dodecagonal prisms, octahedra (as triangular antiprisms) from the hexagonal prisms, tetrahedra (as tetragonal disphenoids) from the cubes, and two tetrahedra from the triangular bipyramids.


Elongated triangular prismatic honeycomb

[edit]
Elongated triangular prismatic honeycomb
Type Uniform honeycomb
Schläfli symbols {3,6}:e×{∞}
s{∞}h1{∞}×{∞}
Coxeter diagrams
Space group
Coxeter notation
[∞,2+,∞,2,∞]
[(∞,2)+,∞,2,∞]
Properties vertex-transitive

The elongated triangular prismatic honeycomb or elongated antiprismatic prismatic cellulation is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of cubes and triangular prisms in a ratio of 1:2.

It is constructed from an elongated triangular tiling extruded into prisms.

It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs.9


Gyrated triangular prismatic honeycomb

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The gyrated triangular prismatic honeycomb or parasquare fastigial cellulation is a space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space made up of triangular prisms. It is vertex-uniform with 12 triangular prisms per vertex.

It can be seen as parallel planes of square tiling with alternating offsets caused by layers of paired triangular prisms. The prisms in each layer are rotated by a right angle to those in the next layer.

It is one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs.

Pairs of triangular prisms can be combined to create gyrobifastigium cells. The resulting honeycomb is closely related but not equivalent: it has the same vertices and edges, but different two-dimensional faces and three-dimensional cells.


Gyroelongated triangular prismatic honeycomb

[edit]
Gyroelongated triangular prismatic honeycomb
Type Uniform honeycomb
Schläfli symbols {3,6}:ge×{∞}
{4,4}f1{∞}
Vertex figure
Space group
Coxeter notation
[4,(4,2+,∞,2+)] ?
Dual -
Properties vertex-transitive

The gyroelongated triangular prismatic honeycomb or elongated parasquare fastigial cellulation is a uniform space-filling tessellation (or honeycomb) in Euclidean 3-space. It is composed of cubes and triangular prisms in a ratio of 1:2.

It is created by alternating layers of cubes and triangular prisms, with the prisms alternating in orientation by 90 degrees.

It is related to the elongated triangular prismatic honeycomb which has the triangular prisms with the same orientation.

This is related to a space-filling polyhedron, elongated gyrobifastigium, where cube and two opposite triangular prisms are augmented together as a single polyhedron:

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The triangular prismatic honeycomb is a convex uniform space-filling tessellation of Euclidean three-dimensional space composed entirely of regular triangular prisms as its cells. In this structure, exactly twelve triangular prisms meet at each vertex, resulting in a vertex configuration denoted as (3.4.4)12, where triangles and squares alternate around each vertex in a highly symmetric arrangement.[1] This honeycomb belongs to the class of uniform honeycombs, which are edge-to-edge tessellations where all cells are uniform polyhedra and all vertices are equivalent under the symmetry group of the figure. It is a noble honeycomb, featuring only a single type of cell, and requires the prisms to be oriented in multiple directions to achieve complete space-filling without gaps or overlaps. Historically, it was first identified by Italian mathematician Alfredo Andreini in his 1905 enumeration of 25 uniform polyhedral tessellations of space.[2] The list was later expanded to 28 such uniform honeycombs by Norman Johnson in 1991, with the triangular prismatic honeycomb designated as number 14.[2] Notable properties include its sectional behavior: planes parallel to the triangular faces of the prisms intersect the honeycomb to produce the regular triangular tiling (36), while planes parallel to the square faces yield the regular square tiling (44). This tessellation exemplifies the prismatic family of uniform honeycombs, derived conceptually from extruding two-dimensional tilings but adapted with directional variations for three-dimensional uniformity. Variants such as the gyrated or elongated forms build upon this base structure, incorporating additional polyhedral cells for more complex arrangements.

Definition and Construction

Definition

The triangular prismatic honeycomb is a convex uniform honeycomb that tessellates three-dimensional Euclidean space, composed entirely of congruent regular triangular prisms as its cells, with 12 prisms meeting at each vertex in a space-filling arrangement.[3][1] As a noble honeycomb, all of its cells are identical uniform polyhedra, ensuring a high degree of regularity in its structure.[4] This infinite tessellation contains an unbounded number of triangular prism cells, along with an infinite collection of equilateral triangular faces (from the prism bases) and square faces (from the prism sides), connected by an infinite number of edges and vertices to fill space without gaps or overlaps.[3] Topologically, it maintains orientability and convexity, embodying the essential properties of uniform honeycombs where vertices are transitive under the symmetry group.[1] The honeycomb was classified as one of 28 convex uniform honeycombs by Branko Grünbaum in his 1994 paper Uniform tilings of 3-space, correcting and expanding on earlier enumerations that included work by H.S.M. Coxeter.[1] Visually, it appears as successive layers of the triangular tiling {3,6} extruded into prisms along the perpendicular direction, creating a stacked, repetitive pattern. It arises briefly as the Cartesian product of the triangular tiling and an apeirogon.[3]

Product Construction

The triangular prismatic honeycomb is mathematically constructed as the Cartesian product—also known as the honeycomb product—of the triangular tiling in the plane and an apeirogon along the third dimension. The triangular tiling, with Schläfli symbol {3,6}, tiles the plane with equilateral triangles meeting six around each vertex, while the apeirogon, denoted {\infty}, represents an infinite polygonal line with two ideal vertices at infinity and infinite dihedral symmetry. This product extrudes each triangular face of the tiling into an infinite triangular prism, with the prisms aligned parallel to the third axis and filling Euclidean 3-space completely without overlaps or gaps.[5] The symmetry of this construction is captured by its Coxeter diagram, represented as $ x \emptyset o_2 x_3 o_6 o ,wherethenodesandbranchesencodethereflectiongenerators.Therightmostthreenodes(, where the nodes and branches encode the reflection generators. The rightmost three nodes ( o_2 x_3 o_6 $) correspond to the mirrors defining the triangular tiling's symmetry group [3,6], with branches indicating dihedral angles of π/2\pi/2, π/3\pi/3, and π/6\pi/6. The disconnected linear node ($ x \emptyset o )withaninfinitebranch() with an infinite branch (\emptyset$) represents the digonal prismatic symmetry from the apeirogon, enforcing infinite translations along the extrusion direction while maintaining the 2-fold rotational symmetry perpendicular to it. This disconnected structure reflects the direct product nature of the underlying Coxeter groups.[5] This product yields a uniform honeycomb because both the triangular tiling and the apeirogon are themselves uniform tessellations, and the Cartesian product operation preserves key uniformity properties: vertex-transitivity under the combined symmetry group, regular polygonal faces (equilateral triangles and squares), and the ability to scale dimensions such that all edges have equal length. Specifically, the triangular bases provide regular {3} faces, the lateral faces are regular squares from the apeirogon extrusion, and the transitivity ensures every vertex environment is equivalent, confirming the honeycomb's uniform status without irregular cells or edges.[5] Among general prismatic honeycombs, which are formed analogously by taking the product of an n-gonal tiling {n,4} (for n ≥ 3) with an apeirogon, the triangular variant uniquely bases its layers on the {3,6} tiling of equilateral triangles, producing cells that are infinite triangular prisms rather than higher-gonal prisms.[5] The vertex figure of this honeycomb is a hexagonal tegum.

Geometric Properties

Cells and Faces

The triangular prismatic honeycomb consists of infinitely many regular triangular prism cells, each comprising two parallel equilateral triangular bases connected by three rectangular lateral faces that become squares in the uniform case.[1] These prisms fill Euclidean 3-space without gaps or overlaps, forming a uniform tessellation where all cells are congruent and vertex-transitive.[3] The faces of the honeycomb include infinitely many equilateral triangles, which serve as the bases of the prisms, and infinitely many squares, which form the lateral faces shared between adjacent prisms.[1] In terms of incidence, each triangular face and each square face is shared by exactly two cells.[3] The honeycomb is constructed as the product of the triangular tiling {3,6} and an apeirogon, resulting in an arrangement where 12 prisms meet at each vertex.[3] At each vertex, six squares and six triangles meet, corresponding to a vertex configuration of (3.4)6.[3] This ensures the uniform symmetry of the honeycomb.[1]

Vertex Configuration

The vertex configuration of the triangular prismatic honeycomb is given by the notation (3.4)6 or 3.4.3.4.3.4.3.4.3.4.3.4, describing the cyclic arrangement of six equilateral triangular faces alternating with six square faces around each vertex.[5] This configuration arises from the product's structure, where the triangular tiling's sixfold vertex symmetry in the base plane combines with the prismatic extrusion, resulting in the interleaved polygonal faces at every vertex.[6] Twelve triangular prisms meet at each vertex of the honeycomb, with their faces contributing to the local arrangement described by the vertex configuration.[3] The vertex figure is a hexagonal tegum, a uniform polyhedron constructed as the dual of a hexagonal prism, featuring twelve equilateral triangular faces forming a bipyramid over an equatorial hexagon.[7] This vertex figure is obtained by connecting the midpoints of the edges incident to the original vertex, capturing the spherical topology of the link at that point. Topologically, the uniform hexagonal tegum as the vertex figure ensures the honeycomb's uniformity, as it demonstrates that the local geometry at every vertex is identical and transitive under the symmetry group, confirming the regular alternation of cell types without irregularities.[8]

Edge Lengths and Measures

The triangular prismatic honeycomb is analyzed under the assumption of unit edge length for all edges, a uniformity condition that simplifies geometric calculations and ensures all triangular and square edges measure 1.[3] The dihedral angle between a triangular face and a square face (the only type, as faces alternate around edges) is 90°. The height of each triangular prism is 1 for unit edge length. The cells of the honeycomb are regular triangular prisms with unit edges, for which the inradius is 3/60.289\sqrt{3}/6 \approx 0.289 (limited by the triangular base) and the circumradius is 7/120.763\sqrt{7/12} \approx 0.763.

Symmetry

Uniform Symmetry

The uniform symmetry group of the triangular prismatic honeycomb is a prismatic symmetry that combines the symmetry of the triangular tiling—with its characteristic order-6 rotational symmetry—with infinite translations along the prism axis, ensuring the structure remains vertex-transitive and uniform.[3] This group arises from the Cartesian product construction of the honeycomb, integrating the wallpaper group p6m of the base triangular tiling {3,6} with the translational symmetries of the apeirogon {∞} along the third dimension.[3] In Coxeter notation, the symmetry is expressed as [3,6] × [∞].[3] These operations, along with glide reflections and translations, preserve the uniformity by mapping triangular prism cells to one another while maintaining regular faces and equivalent vertex environments. The Schläfli symbol {3,6} × {∞} encapsulates this prismatic uniformity, denoting the product of the triangular tiling and the infinite polygonal line.[3] This symmetry framework guarantees that all vertices are equivalent under the group action, as any vertex can be mapped to any other via a composition of the base tiling's symmetries and axial translations, thereby upholding the noble uniform nature of the honeycomb where 12 triangular prisms meet at each vertex in a consistent configuration. The full isogonal symmetry group extends this by incorporating additional isometries that preserve orientation but not necessarily cell orientations.

Full Symmetry Group

The full symmetry group of the triangular prismatic honeycomb is given by the direct product of the wallpaper group p6mm, which describes the symmetries of the base triangular tiling including rotations and reflections in the plane, and the group of translations t along the prismatic direction, resulting in an infinite-order group due to unbounded translations in three dimensions. An equivalent notation is V3❘W2, where V3 captures the threefold rotational components adapted to the triangular structure and W2 denotes the infinite dihedral aspects in the prismatic direction.[3] The principal subgroups include the rotation subgroup p6 × t, which excludes planar reflections and has index 2 in the full group, and the subgroup excluding reflections perpendicular to the prismatic axis, also of index 2. The full reflection subgroup, incorporating all mirrors, thus has index 4 relative to the pure rotational-translational subgroup. In orbifold notation, the two-dimensional layers exhibit 6* symmetry, representing six reflection mirrors around a vertex point, with the prismatic extrusion extending this periodically along the third axis without altering the core orbifold structure. This symmetry contrasts with that of the cubic honeycomb, which follows the isotropic affine Coxeter group [4,3,4] of higher rank and equal treatment of all directions, whereas the triangular prismatic honeycomb displays reduced symmetry owing to the anisotropic prismatic direction, lacking rotations about axes transverse to the extrusion. The mirrors defining the group consist of three types from the p6mm component—lines through vertices, midpoints of edges, and bisecting edges—and one additional plane perpendicular to the prismatic axis, delineating a fundamental domain as a segment of a right triangular prism that tiles space under the group action.

Coordinates

Vertex Coordinates

The vertices of the triangular prismatic honeycomb can be embedded in 3-dimensional Euclidean space using Cartesian coordinates that generate a uniform lattice with unit edge length. Specifically, the vertex positions are given by
(i32,j+i2,k) \left( i \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}, \, j + \frac{i}{2}, \, k \right)
where i,j,kZi, j, k \in \mathbb{Z}.[3] This coordinate system arises from the product construction of the honeycomb, where the parameters ii and jj define the vertices of a triangular lattice in the xyxy-plane, extruded along the zz-direction by the integer kk. In the base plane, the xx-coordinate spacing of 3/2\sqrt{3}/2 corresponds to the height of equilateral triangles with unit side length, while the yy-coordinate incorporates an offset of i/2i/2 to stagger alternate rows, ensuring the characteristic hexagonal coordination of the triangular tiling. The zz-coordinate kk stacks these layers at integer intervals, forming the rectangular sides of the prismatic cells.[3] To verify the unit edge length, consider adjacent vertices in the base layer, such as (0,0,0)(0, 0, 0) and (32,12,0)\left( \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}, \frac{1}{2}, 0 \right). The Euclidean distance between them is
(32)2+(12)2+02=34+14=1=1. \sqrt{ \left( \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2} \right)^2 + \left( \frac{1}{2} \right)^2 + 0^2 } = \sqrt{ \frac{3}{4} + \frac{1}{4} } = \sqrt{1} = 1.
Similarly, vertical edges between layers, such as from (0,0,0)(0, 0, 0) to (0,0,1)(0, 0, 1), yield a distance of 1 along the zz-axis. Other nearest-neighbor pairs in the lattice, like (0,0,0)(0, 0, 0) to (0,1,0)(0, 1, 0), also confirm the unit spacing.[3] This normalization choice embeds the honeycomb with edge length 1 while preserving its full symmetry, including the threefold rotational symmetry of the triangular bases and the translational periodicity along all axes, facilitating computational and geometric analysis of the structure.[3]

Edge Vectors

The edge vectors of the triangular prismatic honeycomb describe the directions connecting a reference vertex to its eight adjacent vertices, assuming unit edge length. In the base plane, perpendicular to the prism axis, there are six edge vectors corresponding to the nearest-neighbor connections in the underlying triangular lattice. These are given by (1,0,0)(1, 0, 0), (12,32,0)\left(-\frac{1}{2}, \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}, 0\right), (12,32,0)\left(-\frac{1}{2}, -\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}, 0\right), and their opposites (1,0,0)(-1, 0, 0), (12,32,0)\left(\frac{1}{2}, -\frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}, 0\right), (12,32,0)\left(\frac{1}{2}, \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}, 0\right), each of length 1 and separated by 60-degree angles.[9][3] Along the prism axis, aligned with the z-direction, there are two additional edge vectors: (0,0,1)(0, 0, 1) and (0,0,1)(0, 0, -1), also of unit length.[3] These edge vectors generate the full vertex lattice of the honeycomb through integer linear combinations. Specifically, the three basis vectors—two from the planar set, such as (1,0,0)(1, 0, 0) and (12,32,0)\left(-\frac{1}{2}, \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}, 0\right), along with (0,0,1)(0, 0, 1)—span the coordinate system (i32,j+i2,k)(i \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2}, j + \frac{i}{2}, k) for integers i,j,ki, j, k, producing all vertex positions. The planar vectors directly relate to the triangular lattice, forming its standard basis and ensuring the sixfold coordination in the base layer.[3][9] In the vertex configuration, where 12 triangular prisms meet, the incident edges alternate between the six planar directions and the two vertical ones, reflecting the prismatic extrusion of the triangular tiling.[3][5] Due to the apeirogonal nature of the prisms in this honeycomb—arising from the product of the triangular tiling and an apeirogon—the edges along the z-direction extend infinitely as collinear chains of unit segments, forming the infinite edges of the apeirogonal lateral faces, while the planar edges remain finite segments bounding the triangular bases.[3][5]

Dual Honeycomb

The dual of the triangular prismatic honeycomb is the hexagonal prismatic honeycomb, a uniform space-filling tessellation composed entirely of hexagonal prisms.[10] In this reciprocal structure, each vertex of the original triangular prismatic honeycomb corresponds to a hexagonal prism cell in the dual, while the triangular prism cells of the original correspond to vertices in the dual. This duality establishes a one-to-one mapping between the elements, preserving the overall topology and filling the Euclidean 3-space without gaps or overlaps. The hexagonal prismatic honeycomb arises as the Cartesian product of the regular hexagonal tiling {6,3}\{6,3\} and an apeirogon {}\{\infty\}, effectively extruding infinite hexagonal prisms along a linear direction perpendicular to the tiled plane. At each vertex of this dual honeycomb, six hexagonal prisms meet, reflecting the three hexagons meeting at a vertex in the base tiling multiplied by the two faces adjacent along the extrusion direction. The face planes of the dual are oriented reciprocally to the edges of the original honeycomb, such that each face plane passes through the midpoint of an original edge and is perpendicular to it. This dual pair shares the same symmetry group, ensuring congruent isometry groups for both structures. Visually, the hexagonal prismatic honeycomb occupies the identical volume as the triangular prismatic honeycomb, but with prism axes aligned parallel to the original's extrusion direction, resulting in a complementary arrangement where the infinite layers interlock across dual orientations in the transverse plane.

Other Prismatic Honeycombs

The square prismatic honeycomb consists of square prisms arranged such that adjacent prisms meet at 90° dihedral angles along their lateral edges.[11] When the square bases and lateral faces are equal in size, the cells become regular cubes, resulting in the cubic honeycomb.[12] The hexagonal prismatic honeycomb is the dual of the triangular prismatic honeycomb, featuring hexagonal prisms as cells with 6 meeting at each vertex and a vertex configuration of (4.6.4.6.4.6).[13] The Euclidean n-gonal prismatic honeycombs exist only for n=3 (triangular), n=4 (square/cubic), and n=6 (hexagonal), as part of the 28 uniform honeycombs enumerated by Norman Johnson. They have 12, 8, and 6 prisms meeting at each vertex, respectively, with vertex configurations (3.4.4)^6, (4.4.4.4), and (4.6.4.6.4.6). For pentagonal and higher n-gonal prismatic honeycombs, the structures exist in hyperbolic 3-space rather than Euclidean space, with vertex figures that increase in complexity as n grows due to the hyperbolic nature of the underlying tilings.[14][15]

Archimedean Variants

The Archimedean variants of the triangular prismatic honeycomb are a class of uniform convex honeycombs in Euclidean three-space that extend the base structure through operations such as layer alternation, elongation, gyration, truncation, and snubbing, resulting in vertex-transitive arrangements of triangular prisms combined with other uniform polyhedra like cubes, hexagonal prisms, and dodecagonal prisms. These variants maintain the prismatic layering along a common direction while introducing semi-regular complexity in the transverse plane, analogous to Archimedean tilings extruded into prisms. They were enumerated as part of the 28 uniform prismatic honeycombs derived from the 11 uniform tilings of the plane. The trihexagonal prismatic honeycomb features layers alternating between triangular and hexagonal tilings, filled with triangular prisms and hexagonal prisms such that 4 of each meet at every vertex. Its vertex figure is a rectangular bipyramid. This structure arises from the quasiregular trihexagonal tiling and represents a noble uniform honeycomb.[16] The elongated triangular prismatic honeycomb inserts layers of cubes between the triangular prismatic layers, resulting in 4 cubes and 6 triangular prisms meeting at each vertex. The vertex figure is a pentagonal bipyramid. This variant expands the base honeycomb by adding cubic intervals along the prismatic direction.[17] Gyrated variants introduce chirality through rotation of alternate prismatic layers. The gyrated triangular prismatic honeycomb rotates successive triangular prism layers by 90 degrees relative to the base orientation, preserving the exclusive use of triangular prisms while altering the connectivity for a chiral arrangement. The gyroelongated triangular prismatic honeycomb combines this gyration with elongation, incorporating 4 cubes and 6 gyrated triangular prisms per vertex, sharing the pentagonal bipyramid vertex figure with the non-gyrated elongated form. These structures exhibit enantiomorphic forms due to the rotational offset.[18][19] Truncated variants apply rectification to the edges of the transverse tiling before prismatization. The truncated triangular prismatic honeycomb, derived from the truncated hexagonal tiling, consists of triangular prisms and dodecagonal prisms meeting 3 of each at every vertex, with an isosceles triangular bipyramid vertex figure. The rhombitrihexagonal prismatic honeycomb, based on the rhombitrihexagonal tiling, mixes 2 triangular prisms, 2 cubes, and 2 hexagonal prisms per vertex, with a trapezoidal bipyramid vertex figure. These truncations replace original edges with new faces, increasing cell diversity while maintaining uniformity.[20][21] Snub variants introduce further chirality via alternating twists and insertions of triangular prisms. The snub trihexagonal prismatic honeycomb includes 8 triangular prisms and 2 hexagonal prisms at each vertex, derived from a snubbed trihexagonal tiling, with a pentagonal bipyramid vertex figure. This chiral uniform honeycomb exemplifies the highest density of triangular prisms among the variants, emphasizing alternating and rotated elements for space-filling.[22]
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