1 / 29

Powder X-ray Diffraction Technique

Powder X-ray Diffraction Technique. Dr. Anjani Bhatt Bhavnagar. Keywords. History and Brief Introduction of Powder x-ray Diffractometer Importance of the Technique Information obtained from a Diffractogram Instrumentation of PXRD

anissa
Télécharger la présentation

Powder X-ray Diffraction Technique

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Powder X-ray Diffraction Technique Dr. Anjani Bhatt Bhavnagar

  2. Keywords • History and Brief Introduction of Powder x-ray Diffractometer • Importance of the Technique • Information obtained from a Diffractogram • Instrumentation of PXRD • Analysis and interpretation of PXRD output. • Few examples of PXRD applications.

  3. A bit of History • William Roentgen discovered X-rays in 1895 and determined they had the following properties • Travel in straight lines • Are exponentially absorbed in matter with the exponent proportional to the mass of the absorbing material • Darken photographic plates • Make shadows of absorbing material on photosensitive paper • X-ray range: 0.01 to 10 nanometers • Roentgen was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1901. Debate over the wave vs. particle nature of X-rays led the development of relativity and quantum mechanics

  4. Discovery of Diffraction • Max von Laue theorized that if X-rays were waves, the wavelengths must be extremely small (on the order of 10-10 meters) • If true, the regular structure of crystalline materials should be “viewable” using X-rays • His experiment used an X-ray source directed into a lead box containing an oriented crystal with a photographic plate behind the box • The image created showed: • The lattice of the crystal produced a series of regular spots from concentration of the x-ray intensity as it passed through the crystal and demonstrated the wave character of the x-rays, proved that x-rays could be diffracted by crystalline materials.

  5. Interaction of X-rays with Matter

  6. Bragg’s “Extensions” of Diffraction • Lawrence Bragg and his father W.H. Bragg discovered that diffraction could be treated as reflection from evenly spaced planes if monochromatic x-radiation was used • Bragg’s Law: n = 2d sinwhere n is an integer  is the wavelength of the X-radiationd is the interplanarspacing in the crystalline material and is the diffraction angle • The Bragg Law makes X-ray powder diffraction possible

  7. Empyrean powder X-ray diffractometer What is a Powder? • A perfect powder sample consists of an infinite number of small, randomly oriented crystallites • Note that this is the underlying definition for many quantitative analysis methods! • In real life, the number is of course not infinite, but should be large to give good averaging • Small particle size: 1-5 m is ideal • “Powder samples” can come in many different forms: • Loose powders, Films, sheets, blocks, wires… • Basically any “polycrystalline” sample can be used in PXRD – if it is not a single crystal, it is considered a “powder sample”

  8. Form of Diffractograms of various states of Matter Comparative x-ray scattering by crystalline solids, amorphous solids, liquids and Monatomic gases. The three vertical scales are not equal.

  9. Why We Use Powder Diffraction? • Originally, powder diffraction was mainly used for phase identification • Advantages over single crystal methods: Can be used on ANY sample • If you can mount it, you can measure it • For some materials, single crystal growth is difficult or impossible • Powder methods are the only option • “Real life samples” rarely come as single crystals: Engineering materials, formulations etc. • Powder diffraction can be used on mixtures of compounds • Peak shape analysis gives insights into size, stress and defects

  10. Diffraction Method Method λ Ɵ Laue Variable Fixed Rotating crystal Fixed Variable (in part) Powder Fixed Variable Factors influencing angle of diffraction • Shape and size of the unit cell and orientation of the plane determines the directions of diffraction. 10/25/2017 10

  11. Factors influencing shape of the peak • Ideal / perfect crystal should give a diffraction line. • Real crystals give diffraction peak with symmetric/assymmetric shape. • Defects in crystal are responsible for broadening and shaping of diffraction peaks. • Forms of the defects- - Grain size - Point, line and planar defects - Important consequences of defects is change in the mechanical, optical and electrical properties of material 10/25/2017 11

  12. Importance of the Technique • Powder X-ray diffraction technique is used to get structural information about polycrystalline materials for which single crystal isolation is not possible or is difficult. • This is a good technique to get Qualitative and quantitative information about all the polycrystalline phases present in the material. • Good technique to study polymorphism.

  13. Information obtained from a diffractogram

  14. Notes on Units of Measure 1) an angstrom (Å) is 10-10 meters 2) a nanometer (nm) is 10-9 meters 3) a micrometer (m) or micron is 10-6meters 4) a millimeter (mm) is 10-3 meters In X-ray crystallography, d-spacing and X-ray wavelengths are commonly given in angstroms

  15. Generating X-rays for Diffraction • To get an accurate picture of the structure of a crystalline material requires X-radiation that is as close to monochromatic as possible. • The function of the x-ray tube and associated electronics is to produce a limited frequency range of high-intensity x-rays. • Filters, monochromators, specially tuned detectors and software are then used to further refine the frequency used in the analysis.

  16. The X-ray Tube • The anode is a pure metal. Cu, Mo, Fe, Co and Cr are in common use in XRD applications. Here in our instrument, we are using CuKα monochromatic radiation. (1.54Å) • The tube is cooled by water and housed in a shielding aluminum tower

  17. Applications of Powder X-ray Diffraction technique • Single and mixed Phase identification • Identification of Polymorph • Impurity phase identification • Determination of Unit cell Parameters • Crystallite size determination • Crystallite strain determination • Quantification of Analytephase from a binary mixture of Drug Polymorph • Structure determination from powder Pattern using rietveld refinement • % Crystallinity determination

  18. Modern Use: What Information Can We Get From Powder Diffraction Data? • Phase identification (qualitative phase analysis) • Most important/frequent use of PXRD • Qualitative analysis tool • Search pattern against database to identify phases present • Starting materials, known target compounds, likely impurities • Assumption: The material, or an isostructural material, is in the database • Phase fraction analysis (quantitative phase analysis) • Applied to mixtures of two or more crystalline phases • Compare intensities of selected peaks of all phases • Theoretically only requires one peak/phase, but better with multiple peaks • Accurate analysis requires standardization • Mix known quantities of two phases in several different ratios • Caution: Possibility of amorphous components

  19. What Information Can We Get From Powder Diffraction Data? (Cont’d) • Lattice parameters • Two modes of analysis: • Accurate lattice parameters for a compound of known structure • Unit cell determination for an unknown compound through indexing • ACCURATE peak positions are crucial! • Phase transition behavior • In situ diffraction experiments • Temperature-induced phase transitions • Pressure-induced phase transitions • Kinetic studies • Requires specialized setups

  20. What Information Can We Get From Powder Diffraction Data? (Cont’d) • Line shape analysis • Width of Bragg peaks is inversely related to crystallite size • Often used for crystallite size estimates for nanoparticles • Requires use of a standard to determine instrument contribution first • Microstrain(non uniform strain) also results in peak broadening • Due to atomic disorder, dislocations, vacancies etc. • Different angular dependence than size effects • Residual stress can be determined • Defects like stacking faults and antiphase boundaries also affect line shape

  21. Powder Pattern Analysis Beyond Search/Match • As stated previously, early use of powder methods and most common use today, was for phase Identification. • 1966-1969: Hugo Rietveld introduced a whole pattern fitting approach for neutron data • Nowadays it is known as “Rietveld method” And Soon applied to X-ray data (1977). • Became more feasible with increasing computer power • “Routine” powder tool by now • The Rietveld method can be used to verify structures, determine accurate lattice parameters, microstructural sample characteristics, phase fractions in mixtures etc.

  22. Rietveld refinement for structural analysis • Least squares based minimization algorithm to obtain the best fit between a structural model and a powder pattern • Starting model necessary to apply this method • Applicable to simple and complicated structures, single phase and multi-phase samples • Automatically gives phase fractions and lattice parameters from ALL peaks • Requires good data for meaningful results

  23. Examples of Powder XRD Measurements . PXRD spectra of Bio Materials

  24. Crystallite size and Strain Crystallite size and strain of some samples have been determined with the help of sherrer formula using Pxrd technique :

  25. Quantitative Analysis of Inorganic Materials Quantification analysis of clay based materials Using Rietveld refinement technique with proper background quantification has been done.

  26. Variable Temperature Powder X-ray Diffraction analysis Variable Temp. PXRD of MOF samples.

  27. PXRD analysis of Textiles waste sample Quantification studies showed (1) Thenardite is Sodium Sulphate (8.2%) and (2) Halite is Sodium Chloride (91.8%)

  28. Structure determination of NaCl using Powder patterns

  29. Thank you

More Related