Fundamental Principles
The Diffractogram
Instrumentation & Techniques
XRD Applications
Important Terms
100

 This law, expressed as (n*lambda =2d*sin*theta*) relates the wavelength of X-rays to the interplanar spacing of a crystal lattice.

What is Bragg's Law?

100

The plot of scattered X-ray intensity versus the angle 2θ is known as this.

What is a diffractogram (or XRD pattern)?

100

In a standard powder diffractometer, this is the name for the device that rotates the sample and detector to measure different diffraction angles.

What is the goniometer?

100

The primary use of XRD in materials science is to identify the different crystalline compounds present in a sample, a process known as this.

What is phase identification (or qualitative analysis)?

100

A repeating unit in a crystal lattice that, when repeated in three dimensions, forms the entire crystal structure.

What is a unit cell?

200

The phenomenon that must occur for diffracted X-rays to produce a measurable peak, where scattered waves are in-phase.

What is constructive interferance?

200

On an XRD pattern, the position of the peaks is primarily used to determine this property of the crystal.

What is the lattice parameter (or unit cell size)?

200

The method that uses a fine, powdered sample to ensure that many different crystal orientations are available for diffraction.

What is powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD)?

200

Besides peak position, other aspects of the diffractogram can be used to determine the relative percentages of different crystalline phases in a mixture.

What is quantitative analysis?

200

The planes of atoms that cause X-ray diffraction are identified by these three integers.

What are Miller indicies?

300

This fundamental property of a crystalline material causes it to act like a 3D diffraction grating for X-rays.

What is its regularly spaced arrangement of atoms?

300

In powder diffraction, the sharpness or "breadth" of the peaks can be used to estimate this property of the material.

What is the average crystallite size?

300

Unlike PXRD, this method uses a single, well-ordered specimen to get more precise information about a crystal's atomic positions.

What is single-crystal X-ray diffraction (SCXRD)?

300

XRD can be used to study this phenomenon, where a material's lattice parameters change due to external factors like temperature or pressure.

What is stress and strain?

300

The process by which X-rays interact with the electron cloud of an atom, causing them to change direction.

What is electron scattering?

400

A sample must possess a certain degree of this property for standard XRD to produce sharp peaks, rather than broad bands. 

What is crystallinity?

400

The relative intensity of different peaks is influenced by the type and arrangement of atoms in the crystal, and is described by this set of integers.

What are Miller indices?

400

A bent crystal of quartz or graphite can be used between the X-ray source and the sample to produce this type of X-ray beam.

What is a convergent beam?

400

This analysis technique uses XRD data, along with a structural model, to refine the crystal structure and atomic positions.

What is Rietveld refinement?

400

This term refers to a collection of unit cells that form a continuous, ordered structure.

What is a crystal lattice?

500

The reason X-rays are the ideal form of radiation for this technique is that their wavelength is comparable to this distance.

What is the atomic spacing (or interatomic distance)?

500

This type of material produces a broad, diffuse pattern in XRD, rather than the sharp peaks seen with crystalline materials.

What is an amorphous material?

500

This advanced source of X-rays can provide a much higher intensity and resolution than a standard lab source.

What is a synchrotron?

500

In thin film characterization, this specialized XRD technique is used to measure film thickness, roughness, and density.

What is glancing incidence X-ray reflectivity (GIXR)?

500

A special case of XRD that is used for very small angles to probe larger-scale structures, such as nanoparticles or polymers.

What is small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS)?

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