Difference between revisions of "Debye-Waller factor"

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The '''Debye-Waller factor''' is a term (in scattering equations) which accounts for how thermal fluctuations extinguish scattering intensity (especially high-''q'' peaks). This scattering intensity then appears as [[diffuse scattering]]. Conceptually, thermal fluctuations create disorder, because the atoms/particles oscillate about their equilibrium positions and thus the lattice is never (instantaneously) perfect.
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The '''Debye-Waller factor''' is a term (in [[scattering]] equations) which accounts for how thermal fluctuations extinguish scattering intensity (especially high-''q'' peaks). This scattering intensity then appears as [[diffuse scattering]]. Conceptually, thermal fluctuations create disorder, because the atoms/particles oscillate about their equilibrium positions and thus the lattice is never (instantaneously) perfect.
  
 
The same conceptual framework can be used to describe static disorder. A defective [[lattice]] where many particles are displaced from their idealized positions will cause the structural scattering to be weakened, with diffuse scattering appearing instead.
 
The same conceptual framework can be used to describe static disorder. A defective [[lattice]] where many particles are displaced from their idealized positions will cause the structural scattering to be weakened, with diffuse scattering appearing instead.

Latest revision as of 10:01, 29 October 2014

The Debye-Waller factor is a term (in scattering equations) which accounts for how thermal fluctuations extinguish scattering intensity (especially high-q peaks). This scattering intensity then appears as diffuse scattering. Conceptually, thermal fluctuations create disorder, because the atoms/particles oscillate about their equilibrium positions and thus the lattice is never (instantaneously) perfect.

The same conceptual framework can be used to describe static disorder. A defective lattice where many particles are displaced from their idealized positions will cause the structural scattering to be weakened, with diffuse scattering appearing instead.

Mathematical form

For a lattice-size a, the constituent entities (atoms, particles, etc.) will oscillate about their equilibrium positions with an rms width , attenuating structural peaks like:

Where is the root-mean-square displacement of the lattice-spacing a (such that the spacing at time t is ), and is the relative displacement.

Thus, the intensity of the structural peaks is multiplied by , which attenuates the higher-order (high-q) peaks, and redistributes this intensity into a diffuse scattering term, which appears in the structure factor () as:

And thus appears in the overall intensity as:

where is the form factor.

In the high-q limit, form factors frequently exhibit a scaling (c.f. sphere form factor), in which case one expects (since ):

(Which reproduces the scaling of the Porod law.)

See Also