Electron-density distribution
The electron-density distribution is the three-dimensional realspace arrangement of the electrons in the material. Because electrons are quantum mechanically delocalized, each electron occupies a 'fuzzy' region of space. The total electron density--the summation of the electron distribution for every electron in every atom--is thus inherently spread spatially; e.g a map of electron distribution will have diffuse boundaries. Nevertheless, when the electron distribution is visualized, it is often shown as a surface, representing an isosurface of constant electron-density.
The exact electron-density distribution within a unit cell of a crystal can be reconstructed by carefully fitting the peak heights measured in an x-ray diffraction experiment (crystallographic 'structure solution').
The electron distribution at a larger scale can be similarly reconstructed by fitting small-angle scattering data (SAXS or GISAXS). In this case, one is probing the average electron-density distribution at the nanoscale, without resolving the exact arrangement of electron-distribution (atoms) within this nanostructure.
References
- Mads R. V. Jørgensen, Venkatesha R. Hathwar, Niels Bindzus, Nanna Wahlberg, Yu-Sheng Chen, Jacob Overgaard and Bo B. Iversen Contemporary X-ray electron-density studies using synchrotron radiation IUCrJ 2014 1 (5), 267-280 doi: 10.1107/S2052252514018570