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Hello. I am a PDFgetX3 user and am experiencing issues with measuring the first coordination number of a silicon reference sample.
I measured crystalline silicon powder (NIST Silicon Powder, SRM 640 series) contained in a 1 mm capillary using Mo X-ray with a 2D detector.
After removing the container scattering, I obtained the
of silicon. The resultant pattern matched well with the simulated PDF pattern generated using PDFgui.However, when I calculated the coordination number of the first peak, the integrated RDF value was approximately 3.6–3.7, rather than the expected 4.0.
I used the following equation and assumed a number density of ~0.0499 atoms/ų:
This implies that during the measurement and data processing, the
value might have been underestimated.How can I improve the measurement or processing to obtain an accurate
Alternatively, can I add an empirical constant somewhere in the equation to correct it?
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Thank you very much for your kind explanation.
I now understand that PDFgetX3 does not return an overall scale factor (which varies depending on the r range), making the integrated RDF unreliable.
Regarding your answer (a), if I use PDFgui, would it be possible to obtain parameters related to the overall scale factor (e.g., scale factor or Qdamp) and apply them to RDF calculations?
Additionally, if the scale factor is unreliable, even if I manage to fit the background (B(r) = −4πρ/r), would it still be impossible to extract peak intensities from G(r) via peak fitting? (I noticed that HighScore, by Malvern Panalytical, offers a peak fitting function for this purpose.) Or would it be impossible to obtain reliable background too?
I now realize that understanding PDF analysis is incredibly challenging, both theoretically and experimentally. I recently purchased your book, and it is right here next to me. I hope it contains some helpful hints for these corrections.
(Previously, I thought I had a little understanding of crystallography, but I now see that I was merely familiar with how to use software without making errors.)
Best regards,
Wanuk