1 / 29

Introduction to Patterson Function and its Applications

Introduction to Patterson Function and its Applications “ Transmission Electron Microscopy and Diffractometry of Materials”, B. Fultz and J. Howe, Springer- Verlag Berlin 2002. Chapter 9). The Patterson function: explain diffraction phenomena involving displacement

Download Presentation

Introduction to Patterson Function and its Applications

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Patterson Function and its Applications “Transmission Electron Microscopy and Diffractometry of Materials”, B. Fultz and J. Howe, Springer-Verlag Berlin 2002. Chapter 9) The Patterson function: explain diffraction phenomena involving displacement of atoms off periodic positions (due to temperature or atomic size)  diffuse scattering Phase factor: instead of Fourier transform prefactor ignored:

  2. Supplement: Definitions in diffraction Fourier transform and inverse Fourier transform System 1 System 4 System 2 System 5 System 3 System 6

  3. Relationship among Fourier transform, reciprocal • lattice, and diffraction condition System 1 • Reciprocal lattice • Diffraction condition

  4. System 2, 3 • Reciprocal lattice • Diffraction condition

  5. Patterson function Atom centers at Points in Space: Assuming: Nscatterers (points), located at rj. The total diffracted waves is The discrete distribution of scatterersf(r)

  6. f(r): zero over most of the space, but at atom centers such as , is a Dirac delta function times a constant Property of the Dirac delta function:

  7. Definition of the Patterson function: Slightly different from convolution called “autoconvolution” (the function is not inverted). Convolution: Autocorrelation:

  8. Fourier transform of the Patterson function = the diffracted intensity in kinematical theorem. Define  Inverse transform

  9. The Fourier transform of the scattering factor distribution, f(r)  (k) and i.e.

  10. 1D example of Patterson function

  11. Properties of Patterson function comparing to f(r): 1. Broader Peaks 2. Same periodicity 3. higher symmetry

  12. Case I: Perfect Crystals much easier to handle f(r); the convolution of the atomic form factor of one atom with a sum of delta functions

  13. Shape function RN(x): extended  to 

  14. N = 9 -3a -a 0 2a 4a -4a -2a a 3a shift 8a -3a -a 0 2a 4a -4a -2a a 3a a triangle of twice the total width -9a -7a -5a -3a -a 0 2a 4a 6a 8a -8a -6a -4a -2a a 3a 5a 7a 9a

  15. F(P0(x))  I(k) Convolution theorem: a*b  F(a)F(b); abF(a)*F(b)

  16. If ka  2, the sum will be zero. The sum will have a nonzero value when ka= 2and each term is 1. N: number of terms in the sum 1 D reciprocal lattice

  17. F.T.

  18. A familiar result in a new form.   -function  center of Bragg peaks Peaks broadened by convolution with the shape factor intensity  Bragg peak of Large k are attenuated by the atomic form factor intensity

  19. Patterson Functions for homogeneous disorder and atomic displacement diffuse scattering Deviation from periodicity: Deviation function Perfect periodic function: provide sharp Bragg peaks Look at the second term Mean value for deviation is zero

  20. The same argument for the third term  0 1st term: Patterson function from the average crystal, 2nd term: Patterson function from the deviation crystal. Sharp diffraction peaks from the average crystal often a broad diffuse intensity

  21.  Uncorrelated Displacements: Types of displacement: (1) atomic size differences in an alloy  static displacement, (2) thermal vibrations  dynamic displacement Consider a simple type of displacement disorder: each atom has a small, random shift, , off its site of a periodic lattice Consider the overlap of the atom center distribution with itself after a shift of

  22. 12 0

  23. No correlation in   probability of overlap of two atom centers is the same for all shift except n = 0 When n = 0, perfect overlap at  = 0, at   0: no overlap + = = + The same number of atom- atom overlap

  24. constant deviation F[Pdevs1(x)] increasingly dominates over F[Pdevs2(x)]at larger k. The diffuse scattering increases with k !

  25. Correlated Displacements: Atomic size effects a big atoms locate Overall effect: causes an asymmetry in the shape of the Bragg peaks.

  26. Diffuse Scattering from chemical disorder: Concentration of A-atoms: cA; Concentration of B-atoms: cB. Assume cA > cB  When the product is summed over x. # positive > # negative H positive < H ones negative Pdevs(x 0) = 0; Pdevs(0)  0

  27. Let’s calculate Pdevs(0): cAN peaks of cBNpeaks of cB cA

  28. Just like the case of perfect crystal Total diffracted intensity

  29. The diffuse scattering part is: the difference between the total intensity from all atoms and the intensity in the Bragg peaks

More Related