Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLoren Mathews Modified over 9 years ago
2
BRAVAIS LATTICE Infinite array of discrete points arranged (and oriented) in such a way that it looks exactly the same from whichever point the array is looked at. BL describes the periodic nature of the atomic arrangements (units) in a X’l. X’l structure is obtained when we attach a unit to every lattice point and repeat in space Unit – Single atoms (metals) / group of atoms (NaCl) [BASIS] Lattice + Basis = X’l structure
3
2-D honey comb net P Q R Not a BL Lattice arrangement looks the same from P and R, bur rotated through 180º when viewed from Q
4
Primitive Translation Vectors If the lattice is a BL, then it is possible to find a set of 3 vectors a, b, c such that any point on the BL can be reached by a translation vector R = n 1 a + n 2 b + n 3 c where a, b, c are PTV and n i ’s are integers eg: 2D lattice a1a1 a2a2 a1a1 a2a2 a1a1 a2a2 (A) (B) (C) (D) a1a1 a2a2 (A), (B), (C) define PTV, but (D) is not PTV
5
j i k 3-D Bravais Lattices (a) Simple Cube a2a2 a1a1 a PTV : a3a3
6
F4 F6 F1 F2 F3 F5 A B C2 C1 All atoms are either corner points or face centers and are EQUIVALENT Face centered cubic a1a1 a2a2 a3a3 For Cube B, C1&C2 are Face centers; also F2&F3 PTV
7
(0,0,0) (1,0,0) (1,1,0) (0,1,0) (1,2,0) (0,0,1) (0,-1,2) (0,0,2) (-1,0,2)(-1,-1,2) (0,1,1) (-1,-1,3) a1a1 a2a2 a3a3 PTV
8
Alternate choice of PTV a1a1 a2a2 a3a3
9
Oblique Lattice : a ≠ b, α ≠ 90 Only 2-fold symmetry 2
10
Rectangular Lattice : a ≠ b, α = 90
11
a b 2 mirror Rectangular Lattice : a ≠ b, α = 90 : Symmetry operations
12
a b Hexagonal Lattice : a = b, α = 120
14
PUC and Unit cell for BCC Unit Cell Primitive Unit Cell
15
A is the body center A B is the body center All points have identical surrounding Body-centered cubic: 2 sc lattices displaced by (a/2,a/2,a/2) B PUC
16
PUC and Unit cell for FCC Unit Cell PUC
17
PUC and Unit cell for FCC : alternate PTV
18
P PCP P (Trigonal) PICF P PI I F 7 X’l Systems 14 BL
19
b a c
20
2-D Lattice a1a1 a2a2 60º A lattice which is not a BL can be made into a BL by a proper choice of 2D lattice and a suitable BASIS A B The original lattice which is not a BL can be made into a BL by selecting the 2D oblique lattice (blue color) and a 2-point BASIS A-B
21
BCC Structure
22
FCC Structure
23
NaCl Structure
24
Diamond Structure
25
(0,0,0) (¼, ¼,¼) x y z (¾, ¾,¼) (¼, ¾, ¾) (¾, ¼, ¾) No. of atoms/unit cell = 8 Corners – 1 Face centers – 3 Inside the cube – 4
27
Hexagonal Close Packed (HCP) Structure
28
HCP = HL (BL) + 2 point BASIS at (000) and (2/3,1/3,1/2)
29
The Simple Hexagonal Lattice
30
The HCP Crystal Structure
31
4-circle Diffractometer
33
Reciprocal Lattice (000)
34
2π/λ2π/λ (001) (002) (00 -1) (102) (202)(302) (101)(201)(301) (100)(200) (300) (30 -1) k = k ´- k = G 201 θ 201 (201) plane k´ Incident beam k
35
a* b* (000)(200)(-200) Rotaion = 0º 2π/λ2π/λ Incident beam
36
a* b* (000)(200)(-200) 2π/λ2π/λ Rotaion = 5º
37
a* b* (000)(200)(-200) Rotaion = 10º
38
a* b* (000)(200)(-200) Rotaion = 20º 2π/λ2π/λ
39
a* b* (000)(200)(-200) Rotaion = 5º 2π/λ2π/λ Incident beam 2π/λ2π/λ Rotaion = 20º
40
Schematic diagram of a four-circle diffractometer.
41
2θ2θ I Scattering Intensities and Systematic Absence
42
Diffraction Intensities Scattering by electrons Scattering by atoms Scattering by a unit cell Structure factors Powder diffraction intensity calculations – Multiplicity – Lorentz factor – Absorption, Debye-Scherrer and Bragg Brentano – Temperature factor
43
Scattering by atoms We can consider an atom to be a collection of electrons. This electron density scatters radiation according to the Thomson approach (classical Scattering). However, the radiation is coherent so we have to consider interference between x-rays scattered from different points within the atom – This leads to a strong angle dependence of the scattering – FORM FACTOR.
44
Form factor (Atomic Scattering Factor) We express the scattering power of an atom using a form factor (f) – Form factor is the ratio of scattering from the atom to what would be observed from a single electron 30 20 10 0 f Cu 00.20.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 29 sinθ/λ Form factor is expressed as a function of (sinθ)/λ as the interference depends on both λ and the scattering angle Form factor is equivalent to the atomic number at low angles, but it drops rapidly at high (sinθ)/λ
45
X-ray and neutron form factor The form factor is related to the scattering density distribution in an atoms - It is the Fourier transform of the scattering density - Neutrons are scattered by the nucleus not electrons and as the nucleus is very small, the neutron form factor shows no angular dependence F-F- C Li+ f sinθ/λ 1H1H 7 Li 3 He b X-RAY NEUTRON
46
Scattering by a Unit Cell – Structure Factor The positions of the atoms in a unit cell determine the intensities of the reflections Consider diffraction from (001) planes in (a) and (b) If the path length between rays 1 and 2 differs by λ, the path length between rays 1 and 3 will differ by λ/2 and destructive interfe- rence in (b) will lead to no diffracted intensity (a) a b c 1 2 1 2 (b) 2 1 2 33 (a)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.