As describes, the vertices of the Laves graph can be defined by selecting one out of every eight points in the three-dimensional integer lattice, and forming their nearest neighbor graph. Specifically, one chooses the points and all the other points that can be formed by adding multiples of four to these coordinates. The edges of the Laves graph connect pairs of points whose Euclidean distance from each other is square root of two|. The other non-adjacent pairs of vertices are farther apart, at a distance of at least from each other. The edges of the resulting geometric graph are diagonals of a subset of the faces of the regular skew polyhedron with six square faces per vertex, so the Laves graph is embedded in this skew polyhedron. It is possible to interleave two copies of the structure, filling one-fourth of the points of the integer lattice, while preserving the fact that the adjacent vertices are exactly the pairs of points that are units apart, and all other pairs of points are farther apart. The two copies are mirror images of each other.
As a covering graph
As an abstract graph, the Laves graph can be constructed as the maximalabelian covering graph of the complete graph K4. Being a covering graph of K4 means that there is a mathematical subgroup of symmetries of the Laves graph such that, when vertices that are symmetric to each other in this subgroup are collected together into orbits of the subgroup, there are four orbits, and each pair of orbits is connected by edges of the graph to each other one. That is, the graph whose vertices are orbits and whose edges are adjacent pairs of orbits is exactly K4. Being an abelian covering graph means that this subgroup of symmetries is an abelian group, and being a maximal abelian covering graph means that there is no other covering graph of K4 involving a higher-dimensional abelian group. This construction justifies one of the alternative names of the Laves graph, the K4 crystal. One way to construct a maximal abelian covering graph from a smaller graph G is to choose a spanning tree of G, let d be the number of edges that are not in the spanning tree, and to choose a distinct unit vector in for each of these non-tree edges. Then, fix the set of vertices of the covering graph to be the ordered pairs where v is a vertex of G and w is a vector in. For each such pair, and each edge uv adjacent to v in G, make an edge from to where ε is zero ifuvbelongs to the spanning tree and is otherwise the basis vector associated with uv, and where the plus or minus sign is chosen according to the direction the edge is traversed. The resulting graph is independent of the choice of the spanning tree, and the same construction can also be interpreted more abstractly using the theory ofhomology. Using the same construction, the hexagonal tiling of the plane is the maximal abelian covering graph of the three-edge dipole graph, and the diamond cubic is the maximal abelian covering graph of the four-edge dipole. The d-dimensional integer lattice is the maximal abelian covering graph of a graph with one vertex and d self-loops.
Properties
The Laves graph is a cubic graph and a symmetric graph. The girth of this structure is 10 — the shortest cycles in the graph have 10 vertices — and 15 of these cycles pass through each vertex. The cells of the Voronoi diagram of this structure are heptadecahedra with 17 faces each. They are plesiohedra, polyhedra that tile space isohedrally. Experimenting with the structures formed by these polyhedra led Alan Schoen to discover the gyroidminimal surface. One of the four cubic induced subgraphs of the unit distance graph on the three-dimensional integer lattice having a girth of 10 is isomorphic to the Laves graph.
Physical examples
Molecular crystals
Computations suggest that the Laves graph can serve as the pattern for a metastable or perhaps unstable allotrope of carbon. Like graphite, each atom in the structure is bonded to three others, but in graphite adjacent atoms have the same bonding planes as each other whereas in this structure the bonding planes of adjacent atoms are twisted with respect to each other around the line formed by the bond, with a twisting angle of approximately 70.5°. The Laves graph may also give a crystal structure for boron; computations predict that this should be stable. Other chemicals that may form this structure include SrSi2, and elemental nitrogen.
Other
The structure of the Laves graph, and of gyroid surfaces derived from it, has also been observed experimentally in soap-water systems, and in the chitin networks of butterfly wing scales.