Difference between revisions of "Paper:DNA-nanoparticle superlattices formed from anisotropic building blocks"
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+ | ==Form Factors== | ||
+ | The SI also provides form factors for a variety of nano-object shapes: | ||
+ | * Pyramid | ||
+ | * Cube | ||
+ | * Cylinder | ||
+ | * Octahedron | ||
+ | * Rhombic dodecahedron (RD) | ||
+ | * Triangular prism |
Revision as of 14:09, 15 October 2014
This is a summary/discussion of the results from:
- Matthew R. Jones, Robert J. Macfarlane, Byeongdu Lee, Jian Zhang, Kaylie L. Young, Andrew J. Senesi, and Chad A. Mirkin DNA-nanoparticle superlattices formed from anisotropic building blocks Nature Materials 2010, 9, 913-917 doi: 10.1038/nmat2870
This paper describes the formation of nanoparticle [[superlattices] from anisotropic nano-objects. In the Supplementary Information information, the authors describe how to model x-ray scattering data from lattices of anisotropic nanoparticles.
Summary of Mathematics
Randomly oriented crystals give scattering intensity:
Where the structure factor is defined by an orientational average (randomly oriented crystal(s)):
and can be computed by:
Where c is a constant, and L is the peak shape; such as:
The (isotropic) form factor intensity is an average over all possible particle orientations:
The form factor amplitude is computed via:
Form Factors
The SI also provides form factors for a variety of nano-object shapes:
- Pyramid
- Cube
- Cylinder
- Octahedron
- Rhombic dodecahedron (RD)
- Triangular prism