X-Ray Diffraction
X-Ray Diffraction
X-RAY DIFFRACTION
IN CRYSTAL
I.X-Ray
II.Diffraction
III.Diffraction of Waves by Crystals
IV.X-Ray Diffraction
V.Bragg Equation
VI.X-Ray Methods
VII.Neutron & Electron Diffraction
Bertha Röntgen’s
Hand 8 Nov, 1895
X-RAY
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X-RAY PROPERTIES
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X-RAY ENERGY
x-ray
≈ 10-10 ≈ 1A° E ~ 104 ev
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PRODUCTION OF X-RAYS
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6
X-RAY TUBE
X rays can be produced in a highly evacuated glass bulb, called
an X-ray tube, that contains essentially two electrodes—an
anode made of platinum, tungsten, or another heavy metal of
high melting point, and a cathode. When a high voltage is
applied between the electrodes, streams of electrons (cathode
rays) are accelerated from the cathode to the anode and
produce X rays as they strike the anode.
Evacuated glass bulb
Cathode
Anode
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Monochromatic and Broad
Spectrum of X-rays
X-rays can be created by bombarding a metal target with
high energy (> ) electrons.
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ABSORPTION OF X-RAYS
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Generation of X-rays (K-Shell
Knockout)
An electron in a higher orbital immediately falls to the lower
energy level, releasing its extra energy in the form of a photon. It's
a big drop, so the photon has a high energy level; it is an X-ray
photon.
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Absorption of X-rays
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DIFFRACTION
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LIGHT DIFFRACTION
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LIGHT INTERFERENCE
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Constructive & Destructive Waves
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Light Interference
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Diffraction from a particle and solid
Single particle
To understand diffraction we also
have to consider what happens when
a wave interacts with a single particle.
The particle scatters the incident
beam uniformly in all directions
Solid material
What happens if the beam is incident
on solid material? If we consider a
crystalline material, the scattered
beams may add together in a few
directions and reinforce each other
to give diffracted beams
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Diffraction of Waves by Crystals
Diffraction
X-ray Neutron Electron
The general princibles will be the same for each type of waves.
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Diffraction of Waves by Crystals
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Diffraction of Waves by Crystals
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X-RAY CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
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X-Ray Crystallography
We need X-rays:
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Crystal Structure Determination
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X-Ray Diffraction & Bragg Equation
o 1915, the father and son were awarded the Nobel prize for physics
"for their services in the analysis of crystal structure by means of
Xrays".
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Bragg Equation
Bragg law identifies the angles of the incident
radiation relative to the lattice planes for which
diffraction peaks occurs.
Bragg derived the condition for constructive
interference of the X-rays scattered from a set of
parallel lattice planes.
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BRAGG EQUATION
ө ө
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Diffraction Condition
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Bragg Equation
Incident angle
Reflected angle
Wavelength of X-ray
Total Diffracted
Angle
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Bragg Equation
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Bragg Law
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Constructive interference of waves
scattered from the same plane
If the scattered wave makes the same angle to the plane as
the incident wave
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Diffraction maximum
Coherent scattering from a single plane is not
sufficient to obtain a diffraction maximum. It is also
necessary that successive planes should scatter
in phase
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Labelling the reflection planes
(333) reflection
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n-th order diffraction off (hkl)
planes
Rewriting the Bragg law
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X-ray structure analysis of NaCl
and KCl
The GENERAL PRINCIBLES of X-RAY STRUCTURE ANALYSIS to
DEDUCE the STRUCTURE of NaCl and KCl
Bragg used an ordinary spectrometer and measured the intensity of
specular reflection from a cleaved face of a crystal
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Experimental arrangements
for x-ray diffraction
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Bragg Equation
Note that the smaller the spacing the higher the angle
of diffraction, i.e. the spacing of peaks in the diffraction
pattern is inversely proportional to the spacing of the planes
in the lattice. The diffraction pattern will reflect the
symmetry properties of the lattice.
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Bragg Equation
A simple example is the difference between
the series of (n00) reflections for a simple
cubic and a body centred cubic lattice. For the
simple cubic lattice, all values of n will give Bragg
peaks.
However, for the body centred cubic lattice
the (100) planes are interleaved by an equivalent
set at the halfway position. At the angle where
Bragg's Law would give the (100) reflection the
interleaved planes will give a reflection exactly out
of phase with that from the primary planes, which
will exactly cancel the signal. There is no signal
from (n00) planes with odd values of n. This kind
of argument leads to rules for identifying the
lattice symmetry from "missing" reflections, which
are often quite simple.
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Types of X-ray camera
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X-RAY DIFFRACTION METHODS
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LAUE METHOD
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Transmission Laue Method
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ROTATING CRYSTAL
METHOD
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Rotating Crystal Method
Film
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THE POWDER METHOD
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THE POWDER METHOD
Aa
If the
sample
monochromatic
sampleof someconsists
hundreds
x-ray
of beam
some of
is directed
tens
crystals of randomly
(i.e.
at a a singleorientated
powdered
crystal,
then only
single
sample) crystals,
show
one thator the
two
the diffracted
beams may form
are result.
seen
continuous
to lie oncones.
the
surface
A circle ofof film
several
is used cones.
to record
The
cones
the diffraction
may patternemergeas shown.
in all
directions,
Each cone intersects
forwards the and film
backwards.
giving diffraction lines. The lines
are seen as arcs on the film.
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Debye Scherrer Camera
A very small amount of powdered material is sealed
into a fine capillary tube made from glass that does not
diffract x-rays.
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Debye Scherrer Camera
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Powder diffraction film
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Application of XRD
XRD is a nondestructive technique. Some of the uses of
x-ray diffraction are;
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Advantages and
disadvantages of X-rays
Advantages;
X-ray is the cheapest, the most convenient and
widely used method.
X-rays are not absorbed very much by air, so
the specimen need not be in an evacuated
chamber.
Disadvantage;
They do not interact very strongly with lighter
elements.
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Difraction Methods
Diffraction
X-ray Neutron Electron
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Neutron Diffraction
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Electron Diffraction
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Diffraction Methods
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