Difference between revisions of "Guinier plot"

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Thus a straight line in a plot of ln(''I'') vs. ''[[q]]''<sup>2</sup> is indicative of Guinier scaling and suggests that suggests that a system is essentially monodisperse, and can therefore be used as a means of quality control before further data analysis (e.g. [[Form factor]]). Such an analysis is typically only done with the low-''q'' portion of the data. Linear (Guinier) scaling  
 
Thus a straight line in a plot of ln(''I'') vs. ''[[q]]''<sup>2</sup> is indicative of Guinier scaling and suggests that suggests that a system is essentially monodisperse, and can therefore be used as a means of quality control before further data analysis (e.g. [[Form factor]]). Such an analysis is typically only done with the low-''q'' portion of the data. Linear (Guinier) scaling  
  
==Rule of thumb==
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Smaller particles require measurement of lower ''[[q]]'' for Guinier analysis, as Guinier scaling is only maintained up to a certain maximum ''q'':
The larger one's particles are, the smaller the minimum ''[[q]]'' must be. One also only expects the Guinier scaling to be maintained up to a certain maximum ''q'':
 
 
* For spherical particles, <math>\scriptstyle q_{\mathrm{max}} < 1.3 R_g </math>
 
* For spherical particles, <math>\scriptstyle q_{\mathrm{max}} < 1.3 R_g </math>
 
* For elongated particles, <math>\scriptstyle q_{\mathrm{max}} < 0.8 R_g </math>
 
* For elongated particles, <math>\scriptstyle q_{\mathrm{max}} < 0.8 R_g </math>

Revision as of 11:13, 11 August 2020

Guinier analysis attempts to extract the size-scale for a structure by fitting the scattering to an equation of the form

or equivalently,

Thus a straight line in a plot of ln(I) vs. q2 is indicative of Guinier scaling and suggests that suggests that a system is essentially monodisperse, and can therefore be used as a means of quality control before further data analysis (e.g. Form factor). Such an analysis is typically only done with the low-q portion of the data. Linear (Guinier) scaling

Smaller particles require measurement of lower q for Guinier analysis, as Guinier scaling is only maintained up to a certain maximum q:

  • For spherical particles,
  • For elongated particles,

See Also