Asmi Structural Analysis 01
Asmi Structural Analysis 01
Asmi Structural Analysis 01
• Powder Diffractometers:
– PANalytical X’Pert Pro Multipurpose Powder Diffractometer
– Rigaku SmartLab Multipurpose Diffractometer
– Rigaku Cr-Source Powder Diffractometer
– Bruker D8 with GADDS 2-dimensional detector
• Other instruments
– Bruker D8 HRXRD
– Bruker Handheld XRF
– Multiwire Back-Reflection Laue Diffractometer
Data Analysis Workshops
• These workshops are optional, but highly recommended, so that users can
perform effective and accurate analysis of their diffraction data
• Rietveld Refinement
– The Rietveld method is used to refine the crystal structure model of a material. It can be
used for quantitative phase analysis, lattice parameter and crystallite size calculations,
and to refine crystal structure parameters such as atomic positions and occupancies
High Resolution X-Ray Diffraction (HRXRD) Training
• Introduction Lecture
• Instrument training on the Bruker HRXRD and/or Rigaku
SmartLab
• HRXRD Data Analysis Workshop
Introduction to Crystallography and
X-Ray Diffraction Theory
2012 was the 100th Anniversary of X-Ray Diffraction
• X-rays were discovered by WC Rontgen in 1895
• In 1912, PP Ewald developed a formula to describe the
passage of light waves through an ordered array of scattering
atoms, based on the hypothesis that crystals were composed
of a space-lattice-like construction of particles.
• Maxwell von Laue realized that X-rays might be the correct
wavelength to diffract from the proposed space lattice.
• In June 1912, von Laue published the first diffraction pattern
in Proceedings of the Royal Bavarian Academy of Science.
10000
– To keep the X-ray beam properly
focused, the incident angle omega
5000 changes in conjunction with 2theta
– This can be accomplished by rotating
0
the sample or by rotating the X-ray
35 40 45 50 55 tube.
Position [°2Theta] (Cu K-alpha)
X-rays scatter from atoms in a material and therefore contain
information about the atomic arrangement
Counts
SiO2 Glass
4000
2000
0
4000 Quartz
3000
2000
1000
0
Cristobalite
4000
2000
0
20 30 40 50
Position [°2Theta] (Copper (Cu))
• The three X-ray scattering patterns above were produced by three chemically identical forms SiO2
• Crystalline materials like quartz and cristobalite produce X-ray diffraction patterns
– Quartz and cristobalite have two different crystal structures
– The Si and O atoms are arranged differently, but both have long-range atomic order
– The difference in their crystal structure is reflected in their different diffraction patterns
• The amorphous glass does not have long-range atomic order and therefore produces only broad
scattering features
Diffraction occurs when light is scattered by a periodic array with
long-range order, producing constructive interference at
specific angles.
• Amorphous materials like glass do not have a periodic array with long-range order, so they
do not produce a diffraction pattern. Their X-ray scattering pattern features broad, poorly
defined amorphous ‘humps’.
Crystalline materials are characterized by the long-
range orderly periodic arrangements of atoms.
• The unit cell is the basic repeating unit that defines the crystal structure.
– The unit cell contains the symmetry elements required to uniquely define the
crystal structure.
– The unit cell might contain more than one molecule:
• for example, the quartz unit cell contains 3 complete molecules of SiO 2.
– The crystal system describes the shape of the unit cell Crystal System: hexagonal
– The lattice parameters describe the size of the unit cell Lattice Parameters:
4.9134 x 4.9134 x 5.4052 Å
(90 x 90 x 120°)
• The unit cell repeats in all dimensions to fill space and produce the
macroscopic grains or crystals of the material
The diffraction pattern is a product of the unique crystal
structure of a material
Quartz
8000
6000 Quartz
4000
2000
0
Cristobalite
8000
6000
4000
2000 Cristobalite
0
20 30 40 50 60
Position [°2Theta] (Copper (Cu))
112
20
110
102
200
111
201
10
003
0
35 40 45 50
Position [°2Theta] (Copper (Cu))
• EachPeak
diffraction
List peak is attributed to the scattering from a specific set of parallel planes
of atoms.
• Miller indices (hkl) are used to identify the different planes of atoms
• Observed diffraction peaks can be related to planes of atoms to assist in analyzing the
atomic structure and microstructure of a sample
A Brief Introduction to Miller Indices
• The Miller indices (hkl) define the reciprocal
axial intercepts of a plane of atoms with the
unit cell
– The (hkl) plane of atoms intercepts the unit cell at , ,
and
– The (220) plane drawn to the right intercepts the
0
unit cell at ½*a, ½*b, and does not intercept the c-
11
d
axis.
• When a plane is parallel to an axis, it is assumed to
intercept at ∞; therefore its reciprocal is 0
0
22
d
– The crystallographic direction is expressed using []
brackets, such as [220]
The diffraction peak position is a product of interplanar
spacing, as calculated by Bragg’s law
Bragg’s Law
2d hkl sin
0
11
d
• Bragg’s law relates the diffraction angle, 2θ, to dhkl
– In most diffractometers, the X-ray wavelength l is fixed.
– Consequently, a family of planes produces a diffraction peak only at a specific angle 2θ.
• dhkl is a geometric function of the size and shape of the unit cell
– dhkl is the vector drawn from the origin to the plane (hkl) at a 90° angle.
– dhkl, the vector magnitude, is the distance between parallel planes of atoms in the
family (hkl)
– Therefore, we often consider that the position of the diffraction peaks are determined
by the distance between parallel planes of atoms.
The diffraction peak intensity is determined by the arrangement
of atoms in the entire crystal
2
𝐼 h𝑘𝑙 ∝|𝐹 h𝑘𝑙|
Fhkl N j f j exp 2i hx j ky j lz j
m
j 1
• The structure factor Fhkl sums the result of scattering from all of the
atoms in the unit cell to form a diffraction peak from the (hkl) planes
of atoms
• The amplitude of scattered light is determined by:
– where the atoms are on the atomic planes
• this is expressed by the fractional coordinates x j yj zj
– what atoms are on the atomic planes
• the scattering factor fj quantifies the efficiency of X-ray scattering at any angle
by the group of electrons in each atom
– The scattering factor is equal to the number of electrons around the atom at 0° θ,
the drops off as θ increases
• Nj is the fraction of every equivalent position that is occupied by atom j
Bragg’s law provides a simplistic model to understand
what conditions are required for diffraction.
s
[hkl]
2d hkl sin q q
d hkl d hkl
• For parallel planes of atoms, with a space dhkl between the planes, constructive
interference only occurs when Bragg’s law is satisfied.
– In our diffractometers, the X-ray wavelength l is fixed.
– A family of planes produces a diffraction peak only at a specific angle 2q.
• Additionally, the plane normal [hkl] must be parallel to the diffraction vector s
– Plane normal [hkl]: the direction perpendicular to a plane of atoms
– Diffraction vector s: the vector that bisects the angle between the incident and
diffracted beam
Many powder diffractometers use the Bragg-Brentano
parafocusing geometry.
Detector
s
X-ray
tube
w
2q
• The incident angle, w, is defined between the X-ray source and the sample.
• The diffraction angle, 2q, is defined between the incident beam and the detector.
• The incident angle w is always ½ of the detector angle 2q .
– In a q:2q instrument (e.g. Rigaku H3R), the tube is fixed, the sample rotates at q °/min and the
detector rotates at 2q °/min.
– In a q:q instrument (e.g. PANalytical X’Pert Pro), the sample is fixed and the tube rotates at a rate -q
°/min and the detector rotates at a rate of q °/min.
• In the Bragg-Brentano geometry, the diffraction vector (s) is always normal to the
surface of the sample.
– The diffraction vector is the vector that bisects the angle between the incident and scattered beam
A single crystal specimen in a Bragg-Brentano diffractometer
would produce only one family of peaks in the diffraction pattern.
2q
At 20.6 °2q, Bragg’s law The (110) planes would diffract at 29.3 The (200) planes are parallel to the (100)
fulfilled for the (100) planes, °2q; however, they are not properly planes. Therefore, they also diffract for this
producing a diffraction peak. aligned to produce a diffraction peak crystal. Since d200 is ½ d100, they appear at
(the perpendicular to those planes 42 °2q.
does not bisect the incident and
diffracted beams). Only background is
observed.
A polycrystalline sample should contain thousands of crystallites.
Therefore, all possible diffraction peaks should be observed.
[110] [200]
[100]
s s
s
2q 2q 2q
• For every set of planes, there will be a small percentage of crystallites that are properly
oriented to diffract (the plane perpendicular bisects the incident and diffracted beams).
• Basic assumptions of powder diffraction are that for every set of planes there is an equal
number of crystallites that will diffract and that there is a statistically relevant number of
crystallites, not just one or two.
Powder diffraction is more aptly named polycrystalline
diffraction
• Samples can be powder, sintered pellets, coatings on substrates, engine blocks...
• The ideal “powder” sample contains tens of thousands of randomly oriented
crystallites
– Every diffraction peak is the product of X-rays scattering from an equal number
of crystallites
– Only a small fraction of the crystallites in the specimen actually contribute to
the measured diffraction pattern
• XRPD is a somewhat inefficient measurement technique
• Irradiating a larger volume of material can help ensure that a statistically relevant
number of grains contribute to the diffraction pattern
– Small sample quantities pose a problem because the sample size limits the
number of crystallites that can contribute to the measurement
X-rays are scattered in a sphere around the sample
• Each diffraction peak is actually a Debye diffraction cone produced by the tens of
thousands of randomly oriented crystallites in an ideal sample.
– A cone along the sphere corresponds to a single Bragg angle 2theta
• The linear diffraction pattern is formed as the detector scans along an arc that
intersects each Debye cone at a single point
• Only a small fraction of scattered X-rays are observed by the detector.
X-Ray Powder Diffraction (XRPD) is a somewhat
inefficient measurement technique
• The absolute intensity, i.e. the number of X rays observed in a given peak,
can vary due to instrumental and experimental parameters.
– The relative intensities of the diffraction peaks should be instrument
independent.
• To calculate relative intensity, divide the absolute intensity of every peak by the
absolute intensity of the most intense peak, and then convert to a percentage. The
most intense peak of a phase is therefore always called the “100% peak”.
– Peak areas are much more reliable than peak heights as a measure of
intensity.
Powder diffraction data consists of a record of photon
intensity versus detector angle 2q.
• Diffraction data can be reduced to a list of peak positions and intensities
– Each dhkl corresponds to a family of atomic planes {hkl}
– individual planes cannot be resolved- this is a limitation of powder diffraction versus
single crystal diffraction
Raw Data Reduced dI list
Counts
Position Intensity DEMO08
hkl dhkl (Å) Relative
[°2q] [cts] 3600
Intensity
25.2000 372.0000 (%)
25.2400 460.0000
25.2800 576.0000
{012 3.4935 49.8
1600
}
25.3200 752.0000
25.3600 1088.0000 {104 2.5583 85.8
25.4000 1488.0000 }
400
25.4400 1892.0000 {110} 2.3852 36.1
25.4800 2104.0000
25.5200 1720.0000
{006 2.1701 1.9
0
}
25.5600 1216.0000
25 30 35 40 45
25.6000 732.0000 Position [°2Theta] (Copper (Cu))
{113} 2.0903 100.0
25.6400 456.0000
{202 1.9680 1.4
25.6800 380.0000
}
25.7200 328.0000
Applications of XRPD
You can use XRD to determine
• Phase Composition of a Sample
– Quantitative Phase Analysis: determine the relative amounts of phases in a
mixture by referencing the relative peak intensities
• Unit cell lattice parameters and Bravais lattice symmetry
– Index peak positions
– Lattice parameters can vary as a function of, and therefore give you
information about, alloying, doping, solid solutions, strains, etc.
• Residual Strain (macrostrain)
• Crystal Structure
– By Rietveld refinement of the entire diffraction pattern
• Epitaxy/Texture/Orientation
• Crystallite Size and Microstrain
– Indicated by peak broadening
– Other defects (stacking faults, etc.) can be measured by analysis of peak
shapes and peak width
• We have in-situ capabilities, too (evaluate all properties above as a
function of time, temperature, and gas environment)
Phase Identification
• The diffraction pattern for every phase is as unique as your fingerprint
– Phases with the same chemical composition can have drastically different
diffraction patterns.
– Use the position and relative intensity of a series of peaks to match
experimental data to the reference patterns in the database
The diffraction pattern of a mixture is a simple sum of
the scattering from each component phase
Databases such as the Powder Diffraction File (PDF) contain dI
lists for thousands of crystalline phases.
• The PDF contains over 300,000 diffraction patterns.
• Modern computer programs can help you determine what phases are
present in your sample by quickly comparing your diffraction data to all of
the patterns in the database.
• The PDF card for an entry contains a lot of useful information, including
literature references.
Quantitative Phase Analysis
• With high quality data, you can determine how much of each phase is
present
– must meet the constant volume assumption (see later slides)
• The ratio of peak intensities varies linearly as a function of weight
fractions for any two phases in a mixture
– =K*
– need to know the constant of proportionality
• RIR (Reference Intensity Ratio) method is fast and gives semi-
quantitative results
–
• Whole pattern fitting/Rietveld refinement is a more accurate but more
complicated analysis
60
I(phase a)/I(phase b) .. 50
40
30
20
10
0
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1
X(phase a)/X(phase b)
You cannot guess the relative amounts of phases based
only on the relative intensities of the diffraction peaks
• The pattern shown above contains equal amounts of TiO2 and Al2O3
• The TiO2 pattern is more intense because TiO2 diffracts X-rays more efficiently
With proper calibration, you can calculate the amount of each phase present in the sample
Unit Cell Lattice Parameter Refinement
K
B2
Intensity (a.u.)
L cos
23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41
2q (deg.)
Preferred Orientation (texture)
8.0
(311)
Intensity(Counts)
6.0 (200)
(220)
4.0
2.0
(222)
(400)
3
x10
40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Two-Theta (deg)
Non-ideal samples: Texture (i.e. preferred
crystallographic orientation)
300
250
Intensity(Counts)
200
150
100
50
0 (111)
(221) JCS#98> CaCO3 - Aragonite
(021) (012)
(102) (112) (220) (041) (132) (113)
(002) (121) (211) (040) (212) (222) (042)
25 30 35 40 45 50 55
Two-Theta (deg)
AC CURRENT
The wavelength of X rays is determined by the anode of
the X-ray source.
• Electrons from the filament strike the target anode, producing characteristic
radiation via the photoelectric effect.
• The anode material determines the wavelengths of characteristic radiation.
• While we would prefer a monochromatic source, the X-ray beam actually consists
of several characteristic wavelengths of X rays.
K
L
M
Spectral Contamination in Diffraction Patterns
Ka1 Ka1
Ka2
Ka2 Ka1
Ka2
W La1
Kb
• The Ka1 & Ka2 doublet will almost always be present
– Very expensive optics can remove the Ka2 line
– Ka1 & Ka2 overlap heavily at low angles and are more separated
at high angles
• W lines form as the tube ages: the W filament contaminates
the target anode and becomes a new X-ray source
• W and Kb lines can be removed with optics
Monochromators remove unwanted wavelengths of radiation
from the incident or diffracted X-ray beam.
Suppression
below the target material on the
periodic table
– For example, when using Cu
radiation
• Cu K-alpha = 1.541 Å
• Cu K-beta= 1.387 Å
• The Ni absorption edge= 1.488 Å
Cu K
Cu K
W L
– The Ni absorption of Cu radiation is:
• 50% of Cu K-alpha Wavelength
• 99% of Cu K-beta
H He
Li Be
Fluorescence B C N O F Ne
Na Mg Al Si P S Cl Ar
K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Ga Ge As Se Br Kr
Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Mo Tc Ru Rh Pd Ag Cd In Sn Sb Te I Xe
Cs Ba L Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi Po At Rn
Fr Ra A
• Some atoms absorb incident X-rays and fluoresce them as X-rays of a different
wavelength
– The absorption of X-rays decreases the diffracted signal
– The fluoresced X-rays increase the background noise
• The increased background noise from fluoresced X-rays can be removed by using:
– a diffracted-beam monochromator
– an energy sensitive detector
• The diffracted beam signal can only be increased by using a different wavelength of
radiation
• The most problematic materials are those two and three below the target material:
– For Cu, the elements that fluoresce the most are Fe and Co
The X-ray Shutter is the most important safety device
on a diffractometer
H2O In H2O Out
Cu ANODE
Be
window
Primary
e-
• X-Ray safety shutters contain the beam
Shutter
Secondary XRAYS
FILAMENT
to the X-rays.
(vacuum) (vacuum)
2d hkl sin
• X Rays from an X-ray tube are:
– divergent
– contain multiple characteristic wavelengths as well as Bremmsstrahlung radiation
• neither of these conditions suit our ability to use X rays for analysis
– the divergence means that instead of a single incident angle q, the sample is actually
illuminated by photons with a range of incident angles.
– the spectral contamination means that the smaple does not diffract a single wavelength
of radiation, but rather several wavelengths of radiation.
• Consequently, a single set of crystallographic planes will produce several diffraction peaks
instead of one diffraction peak.
• Optics are used to:
– limit divergence of the X-ray beam
– refocus X rays into parallel paths
– remove unwanted wavelengths
Most of our powder diffractometers use the Bragg-
Brentano parafocusing geometry.
• A point detector and sample are
moved so that the detector is always
at 2q and the sample surface is
always at q to the incident X-ray
beam.
• In the parafocusing arrangement, the
incident- and diffracted-beam slits
move on a circle that is centered on
the sample. Divergent X rays from the
source hit the sample at different
points on its surface. During the
diffraction process the X rays are
refocused at the detector slit. F: the X-ray source
• This arrangement provides the best DS: the incident-beam divergence-limiting slit
SS: the Soller slit assembly
combination of intensity, peak shape, S: the sample
and angular resolution for the widest RS: the diffracted-beam receiving slit
number of samples. C: the monochromator crystal
AS: the anti-scatter slit
Divergence slits are used to limit the divergence of the
incident X-ray beam.
• The slits block X-rays that have too great a
divergence.
• The size of the divergence slit influences
peak intensity and peak shapes.
• Narrow divergence slits:
– reduce the intensity of the X-ray beam
– reduce the length of the X-ray beam hitting
the sample
– produce sharper peaks
• the instrumental resolution is improved so
that closely spaced peaks can be resolved.
One by-product of the beam divergence is that the length of the
beam illuminating the sample becomes smaller as the incident
angle becomes larger.
• The length of the incident beam
is determined by the divergence
slit, goniometer radius, and
incident angle.
• This should be considered when 185mm Radius Goniometer, XRPD
choosing a divergence slits size: 40.00
– if the divergence slit is too large,
the beam may be significantly 35.00
L
longer than your sample at low I
e 30.00
angles r
n
– if the slit is too small, you may r
g 25.00
not get enough intensity from a
t 2°DS
your sample at higher angles d
h 20.00
i
– Appendix A in the SOP contains a
a
guide to help you choose a slit 15.00
1°DS
(
t
size. e
m
m 10.00
• The width of the beam is d 0.5°DS
constant: 12mm for the Rigaku
)
5.00
RU300. 0.15°DS
0.00
0 20 40 60 80 100
2Theta (deg)
Some systems use parallel-beam optics for a parallel
beam geometry
s Detector
X-ray
tube
w 2q
• Parallel beam optics do NOT require that the incident angle w is always ½
of the detector angle 2q .
• A coupled scan with parallel-beam optics will maintain the diffraction
vector in a constant relationship to the sample.
– If w is always ½ of 2q then the diffraction vector (s) is always normal to the surface of
the sample.
– If w = ½ 2q + τ, then s will be always tilted by τ away from the vertical position.
• That direction will not change as long as both omega and 2theta change in a coupled
relationship so that w is always equal to ½ 2q + τ
Parallel beam optics allow for the possibility of grazing
incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD)
Detector
s
X-ray
tube
w 2q
• The incident angle, w, is set to a very shallow angle (between 0.2 and 5 deg).
– This causes the X-rays to be focused in the surface of the sample, limiting the penetration depth of the X-rays
• Only the detector moves during data collection
– The value τ is changing during the scan (where τ = ½*2q - w)
– As a consequence, the diffraction vector (s) is changing its direction during the scan
• Remember the diffraction only comes from crystallites in which dhkl is parallel to s
– Therefore, the direction being probed in the sample changes
– This is perfectly ok for ideal samples with randomly oriented grains; however, for samples with preferred
orientation this will cause a problem.
• Regular GIXD will constrain the X-ray beam in the top few microns of the surface
• IP-GIXD can be configued to constrain diffraction to the top 10-20 nm of the surface.
Other optics:
• limit divergence of the X-ray beam
– Divergence limiting slits Parallel Plate Collimator & Soller
– Parallel plate collimators Slits block divergent X-rays, but
do not restrict beam size like a
– Soller slits
divergent slit
• refocus X rays into parallel paths
– “parallel-beam optics”
– parabolic mirrors and capillary lenses
– focusing mirrors and lenses
• remove unwanted wavelengths
– monochromators
– Kb filters
• point detectors
– observe one point of space at a time
• slow, but compatible with most/all optics
– scintillation and gas proportional detectors count all photons, within an energy
window, that hit them
– Si(Li) detectors can electronically analyze or filter wavelengths
• position sensitive detectors
– linear PSDs observe all photons scattered along a line from 2 to 10° long
– 2D area detectors observe all photons scattered along a conic section
– gas proportional (gas on wire; microgap anodes)
• limited resolution, issues with deadtime and saturation
– CCD
• limited in size, expensive
– solid state real-time multiple semiconductor strips
• high speed with high resolution, robust
Area (2D) Diffraction allows us to image complete or
incomplete (spotty) Debye diffraction rings
the area observed by a linear detector the area observed by a linear detector
N NaAlH 4 N 0 ek1t
NaAlH 4 Na3AlH6 Al
NaCl
NaAlH4
Rigaku SmartLab Multipurpose Diffractometer
• Ideal for texture (pole figure) and stress measurements, as well as traditional XRPD
and limited SCD and GIXD.
• Two-dimensional area detector (GADDS) permits simultaneous collection of
diffraction data over a 2theta and chi (tilt) range as large as 30°
• Eularian cradle facilitates large range of tilts and rotations of the sample
• A selectable collimator, which conditions the X-ray beam to a spot 0.5mm to
0.05mm diameter, combined with a motorized xy stage stage, permits
microdiffraction for multiple select areas of a sample or mapping across a sample’s
surface.
• Samples can include thin films on wafers or dense pieces up to 6” in diameter
(maximum thickness of 3 mm), powders in top-loaded sample holders or in
capillaries, dense pieces up to 60mm x 50mm x 15mm (and maybe even larger).
• Has an attachment for SAXS measurements.
Bruker D8 Triple Axis Diffractometer
• For GIXD and for analysis of rocking curves, lattice mismatch, and
reciprocal space maps of thin films and semiconductors
– This instrument is typically used to measure the perfection or imperfection of
the crystal lattice in thin films (i.e. rocking curves), the misalignment between
film and substrate in epitaxial films, and reciprocal space mapping.
• High precision Bruker D8 triple axis goniometer
• Beam-conditioning analyzer crystals remove Ka2 radiation and provide
extremely high resolution.
• Accessories include a furnace for heating a sample up to 900°C in air,
vacuum, or inert gas (maximum sample size of 20mm x 20mm x 1mm)
Bruker Small Angle Diffractometer
• a flat plate sample for XRPD should have a smooth flat surface
– if the surface is not smooth and flat, X-ray absorption may reduce the
intensity of low angle peaks
– parallel-beam optics can be used to analyze samples with odd shapes
or rough surfaces
• Densely packed
• Randomly oriented grains/crystallites
• Grain size less than 10 microns
– So that there are tens of thousands of grains irradiated by the X-ray
beam
• ‘Infinitely’ thick
• homogeneous
Preparing a powder specimen
3600
1600
400
0
20 30 40 50
Position [°2Theta] (Copper (Cu))
300
250
Intensity(Counts)
200
150
100
50
0 (111)
(221) JCS#98> CaCO3 - Aragonite
(021) (012)
(102) (112) (220) (041) (132) (113)
(002) (121) (211) (040) (212) (222) (042)
25 30 35 40 45 50 55
Two-Theta (deg)
35.00
L
I
e 30.00
r
n
r
g 25.00
a 2°DS
t
d
h 20.00
i
a
15.00
1°DS
(
t
m
e
m 10.00
d 0.5°DS
)
5.00
0.15°DS
0.00
0 20 40 60 80 100
2Theta (deg)
Penetration Depth of X-Rays
10
• Axial divergence
– Due to divergence of the X-ray beam in plane with the sample
– creates asymmetric broadening of the peak toward low 2theta angles
– Creates peak shift: negative below 90° 2theta and positive above 90°
– Reduced by Soller slits and/or capillary lenses
Counts
0.04rad Soller Slits
0.04rad incident Soller slit and 0.02rad detector Soller Slit
0.02rad Soller Slits
60000
40000
20000
3 4 5 6
Position [°2Theta] (Copper (Cu))
Techniques in the XRD SEF
• Used to determine:
– crystal structure
– orientation
– degree of crystalline perfection/imperfections (twinning, mosaicity,
etc.)
• Sample is illuminated with monochromatic radiation
– The sample axis, phi, and the goniometer axes omega and 2theta are
rotated to capture diffraction spots from at least one hemisphere
– Easier to index and solve the crystal structure because it diffraction
peak is uniquely resolved
Instruments in the XRD SEF
*Diffraction spots are sometimes called reflections. Three cheers for sloppy terminology!
Equivalent positions are points in the unit cell that are
identical to other points in the unit cell
Atom Positions:
x y z
Si 0.47 0 0.667
O 0.414 0.268 0.786
Wavelengths for X-Radiation are Sometimes Updated
Copper Bearden Holzer et al. Cobalt Bearden Holzer et al.
Anodes (1967) (1997) Anodes (1967) (1997)
Cu Ka1 1.54056Å 1.540598 Å Co Ka1 1.788965Å 1.789010 Å
Cu Ka2 1.54439Å 1.544426 Å Co Ka2 1.792850Å 1.792900 Å
Cu Kb 1.39220Å 1.392250 Å Co Kb 1.62079Å 1.620830 Å
Molybdenum Chromium
Anodes Anodes
Mo Ka1 0.709300Å 0.709319 Å Cr Ka1 2.28970Å 2.289760 Å
Mo Ka2 0.713590Å 0.713609 Å Cr Ka2 2.293606Å 2.293663 Å
Mo Kb 0.632288Å 0.632305 Å Cr Kb 2.08487Å 2.084920 Å
• Often quoted values from Cullity (1956) and Bearden, Rev. Mod. Phys. 39 (1967) are
incorrect.
– Values from Bearden (1967) are reprinted in international Tables for X-Ray Crystallography and
most XRD textbooks.
• Most recent values are from Hölzer et al. Phys. Rev. A 56 (1997)
• Has your XRD analysis software been updated?
Crystal structures focus on symmetry elements to
define the atomic arrangement
Quartz
Crystal System: hexagonal
Bravais Lattice: primitive
Space Group: P3221
Lattice Parameters: 4.9134 x 4.9134 x 5.4052 Å
(90 x 90 x 120°)
Useful things to remember about Miller indices
101
100
– In a cubic crystal, (100) (010) and (001) are
002
110
103
102
112
004
equivalent
202
– They are the family of planes {100}
• [h00] is parallel to the a-axis, [0k0] // b-axis,
0
30 40 50 60 70
[00l] // c-axis
Position [°2Theta] (Copper (Cu))
• The Miller indices (hkl) define the reciprocal of the axial intercepts
• The crystallographic direction, [hkl], is the vector normal to (hkl)
• dhkl is the vector extending from the origin to the plane (hkl) and is normal to (hkl)
• The vector dhkl is used in Bragg’s law to determine where diffraction peaks will be
observed
A given (hkl) refers to a family of atomic planes, not a
single atomic plane
The (100) plane includes two
• The Miller indices are determined faces of the cubic unit cell.
by using the plane of atoms that is These are produced by drawing
the first plane (shaded orange)
closest to the origin without at the (1,0,0) intercept, and
then translating it by [-100].
passing through it.
• The other members of the family
The (200) plane also includes
of atoms are determined by two faces of the cubic unit cell.
translating the (hkl) plane of These are produced by drawing
the first plane (shaded orange)
atoms by [hkl] at the (½, 0, 0) intercept, and
then translating it by ±[½, 0, 0].
• A family of planes will always have
one member that passes through The (400) plane includes
members of the (100) and (200)
the origin families, as well as the planes at
• Some planes of atoms may belong the (¼, 0, 0) and (¾, 0, 0)
intercepts. These are produced
to more than one family (as by drawing the first plane
(shaded orange) at the (¼, 0, 0)
illustrated to the right) intercept, and then translating it
by ±[n*¼, 0, 0].