X-Ray Diffraction Procedures

X-Ray Diffraction Procedures

Author: Harold P. Klug

Publisher: Wiley-Interscience

Published: 1974-05-28

Total Pages: 1000

ISBN-13:

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Elementary crystallography. The production and properties of X-rays. Fundamental principles of X-ray diffraction. Photographic powder techniques. Diffractometric powder technique. The interpretation of powder diffraction data. Qualitative and quantitative analysis of crystalline powders. The precision determination of lattice constants. Crystallite size and lattice strains from line broadening. Investigation of preferred orientation and texture. Stress measurements in metals. Radial-distribution studies of noncrystalline materials. Layout for a diffraction laboratory. The handling and processing of X-ray film. Miscellaneous constants and numerical data. International atomic weights. Mass absorption coefficients u/p of the elements (Z=1 to 83) for a selection of wavelenghts. Quadratic forms for the cubic system. Atomic and ionic scattering factors. Lorentz and polarization factors. Temperature factor table. Warren's powder pattern power theorem.


X-Ray Diffraction for Materials Research

X-Ray Diffraction for Materials Research

Author: Myeongkyu Lee

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 2017-03-16

Total Pages: 302

ISBN-13: 1315361973

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X-ray diffraction is a useful and powerful analysis technique for characterizing crystalline materials commonly employed in MSE, physics, and chemistry. This informative new book describes the principles of X-ray diffraction and its applications to materials characterization. It consists of three parts. The first deals with elementary crystallography and optics, which is essential for understanding the theory of X-ray diffraction discussed in the second section of the book. Part 2 describes how the X-ray diffraction can be applied for characterizing such various forms of materials as thin films, single crystals, and powders. The third section of the book covers applications of X-ray diffraction. The book presents a number of examples to help readers better comprehend the subject. X-Ray Diffraction for Materials Research: From Fundamentals to Applications also • provides background knowledge of diffraction to enable nonspecialists to become familiar with the topics • covers the practical applications as well as the underlying principle of X-ray diffraction • presents appropriate examples with answers to help readers understand the contents more easily • includes thin film characterization by X-ray diffraction with relevant experimental techniques • presents a huge number of elaborately drawn graphics to help illustrate the content The book will help readers (students and researchers in materials science, physics, and chemistry) understand crystallography and crystal structures, interference and diffraction, structural analysis of bulk materials, characterization of thin films, and nondestructive measurement of internal stress and phase transition. Diffraction is an optical phenomenon and thus can be better understood when it is explained with an optical approach, which has been neglected in other books. This book helps to fill that gap, providing information to convey the concept of X-ray diffraction and how it can be applied to the materials analysis. This book will be a valuable reference book for researchers in the field and will work well as a good introductory book of X-ray diffraction for students in materials science, physics, and chemistry.


Introduction to X-Ray Powder Diffractometry

Introduction to X-Ray Powder Diffractometry

Author: Ron Jenkins

Publisher: Wiley-Interscience

Published: 1996-07-12

Total Pages: 440

ISBN-13:

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Introduction to X-ray Powder Diffractometry fully updates the achievements in the field over the past fifteen years and provides a much-needed explanation of the state-of-the-art techniques involved in characterizing materials. It covers the latest instruments and methods, with an emphasis on the fundamentals of the diffractometer, its components, alignment, calibration, and automation. While the material is presented in an orderly progression, beginning with basic concepts and moving on to more complex material, each chapter stands on its own and can be studied independently or used as a professional reference. More than 230 illustrations and tables demonstrate techniques and clarify complex material.


X-Ray Diffraction by Polycrystalline Materials

X-Ray Diffraction by Polycrystalline Materials

Author: René Guinebretière

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2013-03-01

Total Pages: 290

ISBN-13: 1118613953

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This book presents a physical approach to the diffraction phenomenon and its applications in materials science. An historical background to the discovery of X-ray diffraction is first outlined. Next, Part 1 gives a description of the physical phenomenon of X-ray diffraction on perfect and imperfect crystals. Part 2 then provides a detailed analysis of the instruments used for the characterization of powdered materials or thin films. The description of the processing of measured signals and their results is also covered, as are recent developments relating to quantitative microstructural analysis of powders or epitaxial thin films on the basis of X-ray diffraction. Given the comprehensive coverage offered by this title, anyone involved in the field of X-ray diffraction and its applications will find this of great use.


Modern Powder Diffraction

Modern Powder Diffraction

Author: David L. Bish

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG

Published: 2018-12-17

Total Pages: 384

ISBN-13: 1501509012

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Volume 20 of Reviews in Mineralogy attempted to: (1) provide examples illustrating the state-of-the-art in powder diffraction, with emphasis on applications to geological materials; (2) describe how to obtain high-quality powder diffraction data; and (3) show how to extract maximum information from available data. In particular, the nonambient experiments are examples of some of the new and exciting areas of study using powder diffraction, and the interested reader is directed to the rapidly growing number of published papers on these subjects. Powder diffraction has evolved to a point where considerable information can be obtained from ug-sized samples, where detection limits are in the hundreds of ppm range, and where useful data can be obtained in milliseconds to microseconds. We hope that the information in this volume will increase the reader's access to the considerable amount of information contained in typical diffraction data.