experimental determination of crystal structure

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1 Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure Introduction to Solid State Physics http://www.physics.udel.edu/~bnikolic/teaching/phys624/ph ys624.html

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Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure. Introduction to Solid State Physics http://www.physics.udel.edu/~bnikolic/teaching/phys624/phys624.html. Principles of diffraction. How do we learn about crystalline structures? Answer:. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

1

Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

Introduction to Solid State Physics http://www.physics.udel.edu/~bnikolic/teaching/phys624/phys624.html

Page 2: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 2

Principles of diffraction

How do we learn about crystalline structures?

Answer:

Diffraction: Send a beam of particles (of de Broglie wavelength or radiation with a wavelength comparable to characteristic length scale of the lattice ( twice the atomic or molecular radii of the constituents).

h p a

a

EXPERIMENT: Identify Bragg peaks which originate from a coherent addition of scattering events in multiple planes within the bulk of the solid.

Page 3: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 3

Principles of diffraction in pictures

Figure 1: Scattering of waves or particles with wavelength of roughly the same size as the lattice repeat distance allows us to learn about the lattice structure. Coherent addition of two particles or waves requires that (the Bragg condition), and yields a scattering maximum on a distant screen.

2 sind

Page 4: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 4

Bad particles for diffraction

Not all particles with de Broglie wavelength will work for this application → For example, most charged particles cannot probe the bulk properties of the crystal, since they lose energy to the scatterer very quickly:

For non-relativistic electron scattering into a solid with

The distance at which initial energy is lost is:

NOTE: Low energy electron diffraction can be used to study the surface of extremely clean samples.

a

2 2 3 2

2 20

4 lndE nq e m v qdx mv qe v

2Åa

23 -3, 10 cm 100ÅE E n x

812.3 10 cm / 50eVha E Ep

Page 5: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 5

Electron probe sees only surface

CONCLUSION:

Figure 2: An electron about to scatter from a typical material. However, at the surface of the material, oxidation and surface reconstruction distort the lattice. If the electron scatters from this region, we cannot learn about the structure of the bulk.

CONCLUSION: Use neutral particles or electromagnetic radiation which scatter only from nuclei → NEUTRONS or X-rays.

Page 6: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 6

Classical theory of diffraction

Three basic assumptions:

1. The operator which describes the coupling of the target to the scattered "object" (in this case the operator is the density) commutes with the Hamiltonian → realm of classical physics.

2. Huygens principle: Every radiated point of the target will serve as a secondary source spherical waves of the same frequency as the source and the amplitude of the diffracted wave is the sum of the wavelengths considering their amplitudes and relative phases.

3. Resulting spherical waves are not scattered again. For example, in the fully quantum theory for neutron scattering this will correspond to approximating the scattering rate by Fermi golden rule, i.e., the so-called first-order Born approximation.

Page 7: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 7

Setup of scattering experiment

0 0( ( ) )0 (incident wave)i t

PR r A A e k R+r

00 0

( )

( )( )

0

Hygens: ( ) ( )

( ) ( )

i

B P

ii t

B

eA R d A

eA R A e d

k R r

k k rk R kR

r rR r

r rR r

Page 8: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 8

Setup of scattering experiment

0 00

( )( )0( ) ( )

i ti

BA eA R d e

R

k R kRk k rr r

•At very large , i.e., in the so-called radiation or far zone:

•In terms of the scattered intensity2

B BI A

02

0 ( )2 ( ) i

B

AI d e

R

k k rr r2 20 0

2 2( ) ( ) ( )iB

A AI d e

R R

KrK r r K

Fourier transform of the density of scatterers

R

Page 9: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 9

Phase information is lost!

•From the Fourier uncertainty principle : Resolution of smaller structures requires larger values of (some combination of large scattering angles and short wavelenght of the incident light).

x k K

( ) ( ) KiiKd e e KrK r r

2( ) ( )I K K

→ From a complete experiment, measuring intensity for all scattering angles, one does not have enough information to get density of scatterers by inverting Fourier transform → Instead guess for one of the 14 Bravais lattices and the basis, Fourier transform this, fit parameters to compare to experimental data.

Page 10: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 10

Patterson function

•The Patterson function is the autocorrelation function of the scattering density (it has maximum whenever corresponds to a vector between two atoms in the structure):

2( ) ( ) ( ) ( )i iI e d e d Kr KrK K r r r r

r r r

( ) ( ) ( )iI e d d KrK r r r r r

( ) ( ) ( )P d r r r r rr

Page 11: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 11

Scattering from 1D periodic structures

Density of periodic crystal:

( )

( ) ( ) ( )

( ) ( )

21

n

n n n

n

iG xn

n

iG x ma iG x iG man n

n n

iG man

x ma x x e

x ma e e e x

ne Ga

Page 12: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 12

Scattering from 3D periodic structures

Generalization to three-dimensional structures:

2 ,n m m G r

1 1 2 2 3 3 1 2 3( ) ( ), ; , ,n n n n n n n r r r r a a a

1 2 3 1 2 3 1 1

1 1 2 1 3 1

2 ,

2 , 0

h k l h k l n m m

G g g g g g g ag a g a g a

Page 13: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 13

Reciprocal lattice

The orthonormal set forms the basis of the reciprocal lattice:

http://www.matter.org.uk/diffraction/geometry/sperposition_of_waves_exercises.htm

Real-space and reciprocal lattice have the same point group symmetry (but do not necessarily have the same Bravais lattice: example FCC and BCC are reciprocal to each other with point group symmetry ).

2 3 3 1 1 21 2 3

1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3

2 , 2 , 2( ) ( ) ( )

a a a a a ag g g

a a a a a a a a a

1 2 3( , , )g g g

hO

Page 14: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 14

Scattering intensity for a crystal: Laue

20 ( )2( ) ( )i i

B

Ae I K d e

R

Gr K G rG G

G G

r r

( ) ,lattice volume

0,i V

e d V

K G r G Kr

G K20 2

,2( )B

AI K V

R

G G K

This is called Laue condition for scattering. The fact that this is proportional to rather than indicates that the diffraction spots, in this approximation, are infinitely bright (for a sample in thermodynamic limit) → when real broadening is taken into account,

2V V

( )BI K V

Page 15: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 15

Freidel rule

0 k k G

2

*( )hkl hkl

h k l hklhkl

I

I I I

G Gr

•For every spot at , there will be one at . Thus, for example, if we scatter from a crystal with a 3-fold symmetry axis, we will get a 6-fold scattering pattern.

•The scattering pattern always has an inversion center even if none is present in the target!

0 k k G

G G

Page 16: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 16

Graphical Laue

If, and only if the three vectors involved form a closed triangle, is the Laue condition met. If the Laue condition is not met, the incoming wave just moves through the lattice and emerges on the other side of the crystal (neglecting absorption).

Page 17: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 17

Graphical Laue: Ewald sphere

Figure 1: The Ewald Construction to determine if the conditions are correct for obtaining a Bragg peak: Select a point in k-space as the origin. Draw the incident wavevector to the origin. From the base of , spin (remember, that for elastic scattering ) in all possible directions to form a sphere. At each point where this sphere intersects a lattice point in k-space, there will be a Bragg peak with . In the example above we find 8 Bragg peaks. If however, we change by a small amount, then we have none!.

0k0k

k0k k

0 G k k0k

Use powder X-ray Diffraction (powdered sample corresponds to averaging over all orientations of the reciprocal lattice – will observe all peaks that lie within the radius of the origin of reciprocal lattice.

02 k

Page 18: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 18

Miller Indices

1 3 1 2 3 2 3 1 2 32 ( ) ( ) [ ( )] , 22

n

m

m n pg n pg n p g g mmd

G r q a a a G q

G

1 2 3

1 1 1: : : : ( ),

: : : : Miller indices

h k l hkl h hu v wg g g h k l

G

Conventions: , , ( ), { },hkl hkl hkl hkl hkl

Page 19: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 19

Bragg vs. Laue = Reciprocal vs. Real

0

04 22 sin sin 2 sin

hkl

hklhkl

K G

K k dd

K k k

Page 20: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 20

Brillouin Zone interpretation of Bragg and Laue

2 2 2 2 20 2

hklhkl hkl k k G k G k G k

02hkl

hkl

GG k

•We want to know which particular wave vectors out of many (an infinite set, in fact) meet the diffraction (Bragg & Laue) condition for a given crystal lattice plane.

•If we construct Wigner-Seitz cells in the reciprocal lattice, all wave vectors ending on the Wigner-Seitz cell walls will meet the Bragg condition for the set of lattice planes represented by the cell wall.

Page 21: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 21

3D Brillouin zones

•Constructing Brillouin zones is a good example for the evolution of complex systems from the repeated application of simple rules to simple starting conditions - any 12-year old can do it in two dimensions, but in 3D, … Ph.D. thesis in 1965 …

Page 22: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 22

Reciprocal vs. k-vectors

•Arbitrary wave vector k can be written as a sum of some reciprocal lattice vector G plus a suitable wave vector k´; i.e. we can always write k = G + k´ and k´ can always be confined to the first Brillouin zone, i.e. the elementary cell of the reciprocal lattice.

2,x

xn

L NaL

k

( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) iU U U U e G r

Gr r R r r

Page 23: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 23

Nearly-free-electron-like?

Page 24: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 24

Crystal Electrons in the BZ-realm

•All wave vectors that end on a BZ, will fulfill the Bragg condition and thus are diffracted – states with is Bragg reflected into state with (and vice versa)

•Wave vectors completely in the interior of the 1. BZ, or well in between any two BZs, will never get diffracted; they move pretty much as if the potential would be constant, i.e. they behave very close to the solutions of the free electron gas.

U G

a

a

0kkG

Page 25: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 25

Crystal Electrons in the BZ-realm

Page 26: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 26

Scattering from a lattice with a basis

Need structure factor S and form factor f, respectively.

Page 27: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 27

Structure and Form factors

1 2 3

2

( )

, ,

1 1, ( ) ( )

1 ( ) since

1 ( )

hkl hkl

n

hkl hkl

i ihkl hkl hkl cell

cells

ihkl ncell

N N N

i ihkl

cell

I d e d eV V

d eV

e d eV

G r G r

G r r r

G r G r

r r r r

r r r r r r

r r

2( )

1

hkl

hkl

i

i hklhkl

c c

f d e Z I Z

Se fV V

G r

G r

r rAtomic Scattering Form Factor

Structure Factor

S f One atom per unit cell

Page 28: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 28

Extinctions

1 2 3

exp 2hkl

u v w

S f i hu hv wu

r a a a

1 21 1 10,0,0 ( , , )2 2 2

r r

( ) 0, odd1

2 , eveni h k l

hkl

h k lS f e

f h k l

Position of Bragg reflection: Shape and dimension of the unit cell

Intensities of reflections: Content of the unit cell

Fe

Fe

X ray X rayCo

neutron neutronCo

f f

f f

Page 29: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 29

Structure factor revisted: Quantum mechanical case

1

( ) transition fromiie eU U e to

V V

k rkr

k kr r r

Example: Diffraction of electron on crystalline potential

Quantum-Mechanical Probability Amplitude for this transition:

1 1 1

1 1

1

*

( ) ( )( )

ˆ ( ) ( ) ( )

1 ( ) ( ) ( )i i

A U d U

A e e U d U SV

k k k k k k

k k r k k r rk k

r r r r

r r r G G

810 cm E 0.1 eVa

( )

0

1( ) ( )iU d e UV

G r rG r r r 1( ) iS eN

GrGStructure factor is completely determined by geometrical

properties of the crystal.

Page 30: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure

PHYS 624: Experimental Determination of Crystal Structures 30

Structure factor: Conclusion

Any matrix element that describes a transition between two electronic states under the action of crystalline potential will contain a structure factor.

Crystal potential does not have to be necessarily expressed in terms of sum of the atomic potentials; furthermore, the transition do not necessarily involve “external” electrons → everything is valid also for transition between electronic states of a crystal itself.

Extracting of structure factor reflects how spatial distribution of ions affects dynamics of processes in crystals. Example:

0( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) for electronsS

r r r k k k

1( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( )S for molecules r r k k k