Difference between revisions of "Paper:Scattering Curves of Ordered Mesoscopic Materials"

From GISAXS
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "This is a summary/discussion of the results from: * S. Förster, A. Timmann, M. Konrad, C. Schellbach, A. Meyer, S.S. Funari, P. Mulvaney, R. Knott, J. [http://pubs.acs.org/do...")
 
(Mathematics)
 
Line 9: Line 9:
 
</math>
 
</math>
  
The ''b<sub>1</sub>'' and ''b<sub>2</sub>'' are the scattering lengths, which basically describes how strongly each material "scatters" the x-rays. So the <math>(b_1 - b_2)</math> is the ''scattering contrast''. The ''F(q)'' is the Fourier transform of the particle form (related to the "Form Factor") and ''Z(q)'' is the [[lattice factor]] that describes the spatial distribution of the particles (related the "Structure Factor").
+
The ''b<sub>1</sub>'' and ''b<sub>2</sub>'' are the scattering lengths, which basically describes how strongly each material "scatters" the x-rays. So the <math>(b_1 - b_2)</math> is the ''scattering contrast''. The ''F(q)'' is the [[Fourier transform]] of the particle form (related to the "[[Form Factor]]") and ''Z(q)'' is the [[lattice factor]] that describes the spatial distribution of the particles (related the "[[Structure Factor]]").
  
 
Equation (30) (with Equation (2)) recast this slightly:
 
Equation (30) (with Equation (2)) recast this slightly:

Latest revision as of 08:58, 29 October 2014

This is a summary/discussion of the results from:

Mathematics

Equation (1) describes the general scattered intensity from particles (phase 1) in a matrix (phase 2):

The b1 and b2 are the scattering lengths, which basically describes how strongly each material "scatters" the x-rays. So the is the scattering contrast. The F(q) is the Fourier transform of the particle form (related to the "Form Factor") and Z(q) is the lattice factor that describes the spatial distribution of the particles (related the "Structure Factor").

Equation (30) (with Equation (2)) recast this slightly:

Where P(q) is the form factor and S(q) is the structure factor. G(q) is a Debye-Waller factor for thermal disorder:

Z0 is the lattice factor computed from a sum over reciprocal space peaks (Miller indices {hkl}):

where the pre-factor is affected by the dimensionality, d, which also influences the projected volume , the solid angle , and the lattice type, which influences the number of particles per unit cell, n. The sum over peaks {hkl} requires knowing the multiplicities (), symmetry factors () and peak positions () for the given lattice type (BCC, FCC, etc.).