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Electron Density in Crystals

Electron Density in Crystals. Since the crystal is made up of repeating unit cells, the electron density in the cell must be periodic! This is called the Charge Density Wave. In 1-dimension, the length of the charge density wave is the cell length. One-Dimensional Crystal. Charge Density Wave.

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Electron Density in Crystals

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  1. Electron Density in Crystals • Since the crystal is made up of repeating unit cells, the electron density in the cell must be periodic! • This is called the Charge Density Wave. • In 1-dimension, the length of the charge density wave is the cell length.

  2. One-Dimensional Crystal

  3. Charge Density Wave

  4. Fourier Series

  5. Wave Components One wavelength/cell h=1 ten wavelengths/cell h=10

  6. Correct Phasing

  7. Incorrect Phasing

  8. Diffraction in 1-D • is the electron density at any point x F(h) is called the structure factor and is indexed by the value h F is related to the square root of the intensity of the diffracted beam. Fo is the observed structure factorFc calculated

  9. A Comparison • The Charge Density Wave (CDW) can be decomposed into Fourier components which when summed give the CDW. • The CDW can also be calculated from a Fourier sum of the diffracted waves. • The structure factors F represent the Fourier components of the CDW • The amplitude F is the Fourier coeffcient!

  10. Shift of Origin

  11. Shift of Origin • Clearly this shift does nothing to change the Fourier Coefficients since the shape of the wave is unchanged. • All that is needed is to change the phase of each wave by ½ wavelength. • The location of the atoms is in the phases and not the coefficients!! • Cannot tell positions from diffraction data

  12. Fourier Domains • In the crystal the electron density makes up real space. • Real space has the symmetry of the space group • The Fourier Transfer generates reciprocal space • Reciprocal Space is the diffraction space • Reciprocal space has the same symmetry as real space.

  13. Views of Reciprocal Space

  14. NMR

  15. Real Reciprocal Relations • Reciprocal lengths and angles are indicated by a * (a* b* c* a* b* g*) • a*.a=1 a*.b=0 a*.c=0 etc. • Therefore a* is perpendicular to the bc plane, b* to the ac plane and c* the ab plane.

  16. Reciprocal cell

  17. 1-D Centered Cell

  18. Expand to 3-D • The only waves possible must be components of the 3 1-d systems along a, b, and c. • Use h along a k along b and l along c • F(hkl) is the 3-d structure factor

  19. Diffraction Data 1 1 7 537.22 13.60 1 1 8 517.09 12.86 -1 -1 -9 712.87 17.72 1 1 9 716.10 17.99 -1 -1 -10 341.13 9.31 1 1 10 348.02 9.23 -1 -1 -11 8.12 0.46 1 1 11 8.14 0.42 -1 -1 -12 0.26 0.21 1 1 12 0.16 0.22 -1 -1 -13 177.19 5.10 1 1 13 176.55 4.88 -1 -1 -14 363.25 9.10 1 1 14 372.53 10.10 • H K L F2 s(F2)

  20. 2-fold Screw Axes • Along b have –x,1/2+y,-z • For points on the axis (i.e. 0,y,0) this looks like a translation only. • Just like 1-d centered cell • Result for 0k0 h=2n systematic presence • If the screw does not run through origin the same presences exit because cannot detect the origin shift!

  21. 31 Along C axis • In this case only waves with l=3 are allowed • Thus the condition is 00l, l=3n

  22. Glide perpendicular to b • As before, points in the ac plane see only translation. • Translate ½ along c • Allowed h0l l=2n • For n glide translation is ½ along the ac diagonal resulting in h0l h+l=2n

  23. Centering • C centering adds (1/2,1/2,0) to all points. • Therefore for all hkl h+k=2n • I centering adds (1/2,1/2,1/2) to all points • Therefore for all hkl h+k+l=2n

  24. C2/c

  25. Pnma

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