diffraction lineshapes (from “transmission electron microscopy and diffractometry of

48
Diffraction Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and Diffractometry rials”, B. Fultz and J. Howe, Springer-Verlag Berlin 2002. Ch Peak form for X-ray peaks: Gaussian Lorentizian Voigt, Psudo-Voigt:

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Diffraction Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and Diffractometry of Materials”, B. Fultz and J. Howe, Springer- Verlag Berlin 2002. Chapter 8). Peak form for X-ray peaks: Gaussian Lorentizian Voigt, Psudo -Voigt:. Gaussian function. x 0. FWHM. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Diffraction Lineshapes(From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and Diffractometry of

Materials”, B. Fultz and J. Howe, Springer-Verlag Berlin 2002. Chapter 8)

Peak form for X-ray peaks:Gaussian

LorentizianVoigt,

Psudo-Voigt:

Page 2: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

2

20 )(

exp)0(),(

xxIxI

Gaussian function

x0

)0(I

eI /)0(GB

2/)0(I

2

20)(

exp)0(2

)0(

xx

II

2

20)(

2ln

xx

2ln2GBFWHM

2ln0 xx

Page 3: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Lorentzian function or Cauchy form

20 )(1

)0(),(

xx

IxI

2CBFWHM

x0

)0(I

GB2/)0(I

20 )(1

)0(

2

)0(

xx

II

1)( 20

xx 0xx

Page 4: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Voigt: convolution of a Lorentzian and a Gaussian

)(erfiRe)0(),,( zIxI 2ix

z

Complex error function

)(erfc)(erfi2

izez z

)5145.41186.21245.21( 2 GV BBFWHM

most universal; more complex to fit.

Page 5: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Lorentzian function or Cauchy form20 )(41

)0()(

C

C

Bxx

IxI

CBFWHM

2

20)(4

2lnexp)0()(G

GB

xxIxI

Gaussian functionFWHM

pseudo-Voigt:

GB

)()1()()0(),( xIxIIxI GCp

: Cauchy content, fraction of Cauchy form.

2ln22ln2 GG BB

22 CC BB

Page 6: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

2 = FWHM

FWHM2ln2

Page 7: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Lineshapes: disturbed by the presence of K1 and K2.

Decouple them if necessary:

Rachinger Correction for K1 and K2 separation:

Assume: (1) K1 and K2 identical lines profiles (notnecessarily symmetrical); (2) Ip of K2 = ½ Ip of K1.

tan22

tan)/(22

)/sin2)(cos/(2

cos/2

cos2sin2

d

dd

)()( 12

Page 8: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

313

212

111

10

)(

)(

)(

0)(

II

II

II

I

2/)()( 11414 III

2/)()( 12515 III

2/)()( 131 iii III…

2/)()( 11 miii III General form

Example: Separated by 3 unitIi: experimental intensity at point iIi(1): part of Ii due to due to K1

Page 9: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Diffraction Line Broadening and Convolution

Sources of Broadening: (1) small sizes of crystalline (2) distributions of strains within individual crystallites, or difference in strains between crystallites (3) The diffractometer (instrumental broadening)

Page 10: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Size Broadening:

Interference function

3

12

222

sin

sin

i i

iitotal

NFAI

a

a

Define deviation vector

332211 bbb

3

12

222

sin

sin

i ii

iiitotal a

aNFAI

)()()()( 332211 IIII

11

2111

2

11 sin

sin)(

a

aNI

22

2222

2

22 sin

sin)(

a

aNI

Page 11: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

11

2111

2

11 sin

sin)(

a

aNI

I

21N2

11 )0(0 NI

Half width half maximum (HWHM): particular

k

'1

2)( 21

'1 NI

'1

'1 usually small

2)(

sin

sin

sin)(

21

21

'1

11'1

2

1'1

211

'1

2'11

N

a

aN

a

aNI

11'111

'1 sin2)( aNaN

Solve graphically

Page 12: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Define 11'1 aNx

~ 1.392

Solution: x = 1.392

392.111'1 aN

LaNaN

443.0443.0392.1

1111

'1

Define1

k0k k

0kksink

sin2

k

kddd

kd

cos2

cos2'1

L

443.0

cos2

Page 13: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

FWHM '12 kd

cos2

89.0

L

cos2

89.0

L

In X-ray, 2 is usually used, define 2B

cos

89.0

BL B in radians

If the is used instead of 2, K should be divided by 2.

cosB

KL Scherrer equation, K is Scherrer constant

Page 14: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Strain broadening:Uniform strain lattice constant change Bragg peaksshift.Assume strain = d0 change to d0(1+ ).

Diffraction condition:

)1(1

)1(

1

00

dd

Gk

Gdd

kd

0

1

Gdkd

sin2

kIn terms of d

kdcos2

Gdd

cos2

Peak shift

Gd

d

cos2 k

tansin2

cos2

d

d Larger shift for the diffractionpeaks of higher order

Page 15: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Distribution of strains diffraction peaks broadeningStrain distribution relate to

k

2

||

'12

G

'1 is the HWHM of the diffraction G along x̂

Page 16: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Instrument broadening:

Main Sources:

Combining all these broadening by the convolution procedure asymmetric instrument function

convolution

Page 17: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

The Convolution Procedure:instrument function f(x) and the specimen function g(x)the observed diffraction profile, h(). The convolution steps are * Flip f(x) f(-x) * Shift f(-x) with respect to g(x) by f(-x) f(-x) * Multiply f and g f(-x)g(x) * Integrate over x

0 1 2-1-201234

0 1 2-1-201234

f(x)

g(x)

)()()( hdxxgxf

Assume f and g are the functions on the right, the h() that we will get is

1 2-1-201234

f(-x)

0

Page 18: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

01234

0 2-2

= -1

01234

0 2-2

= 1

01234

0 2-2

= -2

01234

0 2-2

= 0

01234

0 2-2

= 2

01234

2-2 0

31/616/3

07/6

0h()

)()()()()( xgxfdxxgxfh

56

Page 19: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Convolution of Gaussians:

2

20 )(

exp)0(),(

xxIxI

2ln2B

Two functionsf(): breadth Bf

g(): breadth Bg h() = f()*g(); breadth Bh

222gfh BBB

http://www.tina-vision.net/docs/memos/2003-003.pdf

B

Page 20: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Convolution of Lorentzians:

Two Lorentzian functions: f(): breadth Bf g(): breadth Bg

h() = f()*g(); breadth Bh

gfh BBB

20 )(1

)0(),(

xx

IxI

2B

Page 21: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Fourier Transform and Deconvolutions:

Remove the blurring, caused by the instrument function:deconvolution (Stokes correction).

Instrument broadening function: f(k) (*k is function of )True specimen diffraction profile: g(k)Measured by the diffractometer: h(K)

n

linkenFkf /2)()(

'

' /2' )()(n

lkinenGkg

''

'' /2'' )()(n

lKinenHKh

l: [1/length], the range in k ofthe Fourier series is the interval–l/2 to l/2.

Fourier transform the above three functions (DFT)

Page 22: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

dkkgkKfKh )()()(

dkenGenFKhl

ln

lkin

n

lkKin

2/

2/

/2'/)(2

'

'

)()()(

The function f and g vanished outside of the k range Integration from - to is replaced by –l/2 to l/2

dkeenFnGKhl

l

lknni

n n

linK

2/

2/

/)(2/2' '

'

)()()(

Orthogonality condition

nn

nnldke

l

l

lknni

'

'2/

2/

/)(2

if 0

if '

dklknnilknndkel

l

l

l

lknni

2/

2/

''2/

2/

/)(2 )/)(2sin()/)(2cos('

vanishes by symmetrydklknn

l

l

2/

2/

' )/)(2cos(

))](sin())([sin()(2

'''

nnnnnn

l

nn ' if 0

ldkl

l

2/

2/

Page 23: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

n

linKenFnGlKh /2)()()( ''

'' /2'' )()(n

lKinenHKh

)()()( nHnFnlG Convolution in k-space is equivalent to a multiplicationin real space (with variable n/l). The converse is alsotrue. Important result of the convolution theorem!

Deconvolution:)(

)()(

nlF

nHnG

{G(n)} is obtained from n

linkenGkg /2)()(

Page 24: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Data froma perfect specimen

Data fromthe actualspecimen

RachingerCorrection(optional)

RachingerCorrection(optional)

f(k)Stokes

CorrectionG(n)=

H(n)/F(n)h(k)

F.T.

Correcteddata free

of instrumentbroadening

F.T.-1

g(k)

“Perfect” specimen: chemical composition, shape,density similar to the actual specimen ( specimenroughness and transparency broadening are similar)* E.g.: For polycrystalline alloy, the specimen is usually obtained by annealing

Page 25: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

f(k), g(k), and h(k): asymmetric F.T. complex coeff.

)()(

)()(1)()(

niFnF

niHnH

lniGnG

ir

irir

)()(

)()(

)()(

)()(1)()(

niFnF

niFnF

niFnF

niHnH

lniGnG

ir

ir

ir

irir

)()(

)()()()(1)(

22 nFnF

nFnHnFnH

lnG

ir

iirrr

)()(

)()()()(1)(

22 nFnF

nFnHnFnH

lnG

ir

irrii

Page 26: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

nir l

nknG

l

nknGkg

2sin)(

2cos)()( real part

g(k) is real and can be reconstructed as

n

linkir eniGnGkg /2)]()([)(

nir l

nki

l

nkniGnG

2sin

2cos)]()([

Page 27: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Simultaneous Strain and Size Broadening:

True sample diffraction profile: strain broadening and size broadening effect

Take advantage of the following facts:Crystalline size broadening is independent of GStrain broadening depends linearly on G

Usually, know one to get the other

Both unknown

Page 28: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Williamson-Hall MethodEasiest way!Requires an assumption of the shape of the peaks:

)exp(1

)(sin

)(sin)(

2

2

2

2

GGa

NaI

Kinematical crystal shape factor intensity

Gaussian functioncharacteristic of thestrain broadening

convolution

Page 29: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

dd

2

2

exp)( 22 to relate G

)1(0 Gk 00 GkG GG

0

Assume a Gaussian strain distribution (quick falloff forstrain larger than the yield strain) ()

dGG

dd

22

2

exp1

)()(

2GG

Page 30: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Approximate the size broadening part with a Gaussian function

Good only when strain broadening >> size broadening

)exp(1

))(

exp()(2

2222

GG

NaNI

NaB

392.1

22ln2 (see page 9)

NaNa 1

2ln

392.1 characteristic width

22 GG

Page 31: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

The convolution of two Gaussians

2

22

)(exp)(

kG

NI

222

2222

2 11)(

G

LG

aNk

hkldGk

1sin2

Plot k2 vs G2

(k)2

G2

2

1

L

2Slope =(HWHM)

Page 32: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Approximate the size broadening and strain broadening: Lorentzian functions

LNaB

443.0392.122

Size:

2)443.0

(1

)0()(

LI

I

Strain:

22

2

)(1

11

)443.0

(1)(

G

GLN

I

2

22

2

)(1

11

)(1

11

G

GG

2GG

Page 33: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

The convolution of two Lorentzian

22

2

)(1

11

)443.0

(1)(

G

GLN

I

2

2

)(1

1)(

kG

NI

2443.0 GL

k

Plot k vs G

k

GL

443.02Slope =

(HWHM)

Page 34: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

The following pages are from:

http://www.imprs-am.mpg.de/nanoschool2004/lectures-I/Lamparter.pdf

Page 35: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Ball-milled Mo from P. Lamparter

(FWHM)

GL

2

2

Page 36: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Nanocrystalline CeO2 Powder from P. Lamparter

Page 37: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Nb film, WH plot from P. Lamparter

Page 38: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

from P. Lamparter

Page 39: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

anisotropy of shape or elastic constants, strains. and sizes k2 vs G2 or k vs G not linear

Using a series of diffraction e.g. (200), (400){(600) overlap with (442), can not be used} provide a characteristic size and characteristic mean-square strain for each crystallographic direction!

Page 40: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Ek fit better than k in this case elastic anisotropic is the main reason for the deviation of k to G.

Ball-milled bcc Fe-20%Cu

Page 41: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Warren and Averbach MethodFourier Methods with Multiple Orders

Q)2exp()()Q( diQLLAI

)()()( LALALA D

size strain

How to interpret A(L)?

GQ

Page 42: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

from P. Lamparter

Page 43: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

from P. Lamparter

Page 44: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

from P. Lamparter

Page 45: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

from P. Lamparter

Page 46: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

from P. Lamparter

Page 47: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

from P. Lamparter

Page 48: Diffraction  Lineshapes (From “Transmission Electron Microscopy and  Diffractometry  of

Williamson-Hall MethodEasy to be doneOnly width of peaks needed

Warren-Averbach MethodMore mathematicsPrecise peak shapes neededDistributions of size and microstrainRelation to other properties(dislocations)