Atomic Scattering Factors 1
Atomic Scattering Factors 1
Fall 2015
Last week:
• Crystals, Crystal Lattice, Reciprocal Lattice,
Diffraction from crystals
• Today:
• Scattering factors and selection rules for
diffraction
• HW2 discussion
1
The Bragg Law
Conditions for a sharp peak in the
intensity of the scattered radiation:
1) the x-rays should be specularly
reflected by the atoms in one plane
2) the reflected rays from the
successive planes interfere constructively
The path difference between the two x-rays: 2d·sinθ
the Bragg formula: 2d·sinθ = mλ
The model used to get the Bragg law are greatly oversimplified
(but it works!).
– It says nothing about intensity and width of x-ray diffraction peaks
– neglects differences in scattering from different atoms
– assumes single atom in every lattice point
– neglects distribution of charge around atoms
Lecture 3 Andrei Sirenko, NJIT 3
2
Ewald Construction for Diffraction
Condition and reciprocal space
2k·G = G2
3
Geometric interpretation of Laue condition:
2k·G = G2
Summary
Various statements of the Bragg condition:
2d·sinθ = mλ ; k = G ; 2k·G = G2
Reciprocal lattice is defined by primitive vectors:
4
Solid State Physics
Lecture 3 (continued)
(Ch. 2)
Diffraction process:
1) Scattering by individual atoms
2) Mutual interference between scattered rays
Scattering from atom
2
Consider single electron. Plane wave u Aei ( k r t ) k k
A
Scattered field: u ' f e ei ( kR t ) fe – scattering length of electron
R R – radial distance
5
2
e
intensity: 2 ik rl
I ~ f fe
l
2
this is for coherent scatterers. If random then I ~ Nf e
f e 1 cos 2 2 / 2 re
12
Scattering length of electron:
e2 1
classical electron radius re 2.8 10 15 m
4 0 mc 2
sin Δk r
r0
f a 4r 2 n(r ) dr
0
Δk r
6
Scattering from crystal
rewrite f cr F S
F f aj e
ik s j - structure factor of the basis,
where
summation over the atoms in unit cell
j
S e ik R l
c
- lattice factor, summation over all
and
unit cells in the crystal
l
Where R l R lc s j
Since k = G,
S e iG R l e i 2m N
c
f cr F N N f aj e
iG s j
Then scattering intensity I ~ |fcr|2 where
j
F f aj e f aj e
i ( u j a1 v j a 2 w j a 3 )( hb1 kb 2 lb 3 ) 2i ( hu j kv j lw j )
Then
j j
7
F
F F F F
F (h, k , l ) f (exp 0) 1 fa
F f aj e
2 i ( hu j kv j lw j )
structure factor
j
Two atoms per unit cell: s1 = (0,0,0); s2 = a(1/2,1/2,1/2)
F f a 1 ei ( h k l )
F=2fa if h+k+l is even, and F=0 if h+k+l is odd
Diffraction is absent for planes with odd sum of Miller indices
For allowed reflections in fcc lattice h,k,and l are all even or all odd
4 atoms in the basis.
What about simple cubic lattice ?
8
Lecture 3 Andrei Sirenko, NJIT 17
hk l
9
F (h, k , l )
F (h, k , l ) f [1 exp(i ( h k ) exp(i (h l ) exp(i (k l )]
F (h, k , l )
F
F
10
Lecture 3 Andrei Sirenko, NJIT 21
11
Low Energy Electron Diffraction (LEED)
= h/p = h/(2mE)1/2
E = 20 eV 2.7Å;
200 eV 0.87 Å
Small penetration depth (few tens of Å)
– surface analysis
12
MBE and Reflection high Energy Electron Diffraction (RHEED)
Ti shutter open
13
Neutron Diffraction
• = h/p = h/(2mE)1/2 mass much larger than electron
1Å 80 meV Thermal energy kT at room T: 25 meV
called "cold" or "thermal' neutrons
• Don't interact with electrons. Scattered by nuclei
• Better to resolve light atoms with small number of electrons, e.g.
Hydrogen
• Distinguish between isotopes (x-rays don't)
• Good to study lattice vibrations
Disadvantages:
• Need to use nuclear reactors as sources; much weaker intensity
compared to x-rays – need to use large crystals
• Harder to detect
Lecture 3 Andrei Sirenko, NJIT 27
Summary
Diffraction amplitude is determined by a product of several
factors: atomic form factor, structural factor
Atomic scattering factor (form factor):
reflects distribution of electronic cloud. f a n(r )e ik rl d 3 r
sin Δk r
In case of spherical distribution r0
f a 4r 2 n(r ) dr
0
Δk r
Atomic factor decreases with increasing scattering angle
F f aj e
Structure factor 2i ( hu j kv j lw j )
j
where the summation is over all atoms in unit cell
Neutron diffraction – "cold neutrons" - interaction with atomic
nuclei, not electrons
Electron diffraction – surface characterization technique
Lecture 3 Andrei Sirenko, NJIT 28
14