Transcript
Page 1: What Is Crystallography?

What is Crystallography

? The science that

examines the arrangement of atoms in solids.

"crystallography" derives from the

Greek words crystallon "cold drop,

frozen drop"

What is a crystal? - crystalline if the atoms or ions that compose it are arranged in a regular way

Page 2: What Is Crystallography?

(Brief) History of Crystallography

Johannes Kepler hypothesized (1611) that the hexagonal symmetry of snowflake crystals was due to a regular packing of spherical water particles.

X-rays were discovered by Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen (1895) Nobel prize in physics in 1901

Max von Laue proposed that a crystal would act in a similar manner to a diffraction grating (1912)

Copper sulfate

William Henry Bragg and William Lawrence Bragg (born SA!) derived a formula which describes how crystals diffract (1912). Joint Nobel prize 1915.

Page 3: What Is Crystallography?

Crystal Diffraction DataCan be measured in different ways but one of the most common is as powders. Each structure gives a unique diffraction data set of peak intensities and spacings.

Diamond

Graphite

Page 4: What Is Crystallography?

Why is Crystallography Important?Earth Sciences – exploration, minerals processing, minerals, high pressure/temperature crystallisation…

Archaeology – paints , residues, ceramics….

Forensic science – soils, powders, paints, explosives, poisons …

Materials science – solar panels,microelectronics, semi-conductors…

Life sciences – DNA, proteins, drugs design…

Metallurgy – phases, hardening, failure, corrosion, heat treatment…

Page 5: What Is Crystallography?

Supersaturation drives crystal growth. Supersaturation is a measure of how much greater the solution concentration is than at equilibrium.Can change supersaturation by changing:

Concentration (add less or let solution evaporate slowly);Temperature – supersaturation increases on decreasing

temperature.

Blue crystals: CuSO4.5H2O Solubility 32 g/100 ml H2O at 20 °C. To make crystals, add 25 g solid into 50 ml water, heat and stir the solution. These crystals are very easy to grow and started growing within 2-3 hours after the solution cooling down.  

Brown crystals: Fe(NO3)3.9H2O Solubility 138 g/100 ml H2O at 20°C .To make crystals, add 70 g solid into 40 ml water, heat and stir the solution. This one took more than 1.5 day to have crystals grow on the string. 

Green crystals: NiCl2.6H2O  Solubility  254 g/100 ml H2O at 20°C.To make crystals, add 75 g solid into 25 ml water, heat and stir the solution. Took around one day to have crystals on the string. 

Demo - Crystal Growth

Page 6: What Is Crystallography?

Demo - Diffraction

n = d Sinθ

Wavelength632.8 nm

‘lattice’ spacinge.g. 2400 lines/inch10,581.6 nm

Diffraction angle, n=1 3.42° n=2 6.87°n=3 10.33

θ

Therefore can work out thickness of hair.Measure angle to regions of destructive interference.Does hair thickness vary between people?

n =1

Page 7: What Is Crystallography?

Diffraction Facilities

Single crystal system for analysis of the structure of a single phase

Most common form of sample for phase identification and quantification. Microdiffractomet

er - spatial resolution (0.001 mm)

Page 8: What Is Crystallography?

Crystallography Now –

SynchrotronsWe have one in Melbourne! 216 m in diameter. (also neutrons and electrons)


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