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Introduction

Crystallographic positional disorder is evident when a position in the lattice is occupied by two or more atoms; the average of which constitutes the bulk composition of the crystal. If a particular atom occupies a certain position in one unit cell and another atom occupies the same position in other unit cells, the resulting electron density will be a weight average of the situation in all the unit cells throughout the crystal. Since the diffraction experiment involves the average of a very large number of unit cells ( ca . 10 18 in a crystal used for single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis), minor static displacements of atoms closely simulate the effects of vibrations on the scattering power of the “average” atom. Unfortunately, the determination of the “average” atom in a crystal may be complicated if positional disorder is encountered.

Crystal disorder involving groups such as CO, CN and Cl have been documented to create problems in assigning the correct structure through refinement procedures. While attempts have been made to correlate crystallographic lattice parameters with bulk chemical composition of the solution from which single crystal was grown, there has been little effort to correlate crystallographic site occupancy with chemical composition of the crystal from which single crystal diffraction data was obtained. These are two very different issues that must be considered when solving a crystal structure with site occupancy disorder.

  1. What is the relationship of a single crystal to the bulk material?
  2. Is the refinement of a site-occupancy-factor actually gives a realistic value for % occupancy when compared to the "actual" % composition for that particular single crystal?

The following represents a description of a series of methods for the refinement of a site occupancy disorder between two atoms (e.g., two metal atoms within a mixture of isostructural compounds).

Methods for x-ray diffraction determination of positional disorder in molecular solid solutions

An atom in a structure is defined by several parameters: the type of atom, the positional coordinates (x, y, z), the occupancy factor (how many “atoms” are at that position) and atomic displacement parameters (often called temperature or thermal parameters). The latter can be thought of as being a “picture” of the volume occupied by the atom over all the unit cells, and can be isotropic (1 parameter defining a spherical volume) or anisotropic (6 parameters defining an ellipsoidal volume). For a “normal” atom, the occupancy factor is fixed as being equal to one, and the positions and displacement parameters are “refined” using least-squares methods to values in which the best agreement with the observed data is obtained. In crystals with site-disorder, one position is occupied by different atoms in different unit cells. This refinement requires a more complicated approach. Two broad methods may be used: either a new atom type that is the appropriate combination of the different atoms is defined, or the same positional parameters are used for different atoms in the model, each of which has occupancy values less than one, and for which the sum is constrained to total one. In both approaches, the relative occupancies of the two atoms are required. For the first approach, these occupancies have to be defined. For the second, the value can be refined. However, there is a relationship between the thermal parameter and the occupancy value so care must be taken when doing this. These issues can be addressed in several ways.

Questions & Answers

A golfer on a fairway is 70 m away from the green, which sits below the level of the fairway by 20 m. If the golfer hits the ball at an angle of 40° with an initial speed of 20 m/s, how close to the green does she come?
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Source:  OpenStax, Physical methods in chemistry and nano science. OpenStax CNX. May 05, 2015 Download for free at http://legacy.cnx.org/content/col10699/1.21
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