Edge-contracted icosahedron


In geometry, an edge-contracted icosahedron is a polyhedron with 18 triangular faces, 27 edges, and 11 vertices with C2v symmetry, order 4.

Construction

It can be constructed from the regular icosahedron, with one edge contraction, removing one vertex, 3 edges, and 2 faces. This contraction distorts the circumscribed sphere original vertices. With all equilateral triangle faces, it has 2 sets of 3 coplanar equilateral triangles, and thus is not a Johnson solid.
If the sets of three coplanar triangles are considered a single face, it has 10 vertices, 22 edges, and 14 faces, 12 triangles and 2 triamonds.
It may also be described as having a hybrid square-pentagonal antiprismatic core ; each base is then augmented with a pyramid.

Related polytopes

The dissected regular icosahedron is a variant topologically equivalent to the sphenocorona with the two sets of 3 coplanar faces as trapezoids. This is the vertex figure of a 4D polytope, grand antiprism. It has 10 vertices, 22 edges, and 12 equilateral triangular faces and 2 trapezoid faces.

In chemistry

In chemistry, this polyhedron is most commonly called the octadecahedron, for 18 triangular faces, and represents the closo-boranate [B11H11]2−.

closo-boranate [B11H11]2−

Net

Related polyhedra

The elongated octahedron is similar to the edge-contracted icosahedron, but instead of only one edge contracted, two opposite edges are contracted.