Ambiguities in the X-Ray Analysis of Crystal Structures
- 1 March 1944
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 65 (5-6) , 195-201
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrev.65.195
Abstract
The intensities of the x-ray reflections from a given crystal of a known substance depend on the vector distances between the atoms and not directly on the coordinates of the atoms. The problem of uniqueness in the x-ray analysis of a crystal structure thus depends on the uniqueness of the determination of the arrangement of a periodic set of points in space by its vector distance set. In this paper a large number of cases is presented in which two, and sometimes three or four, non-congruent sets of points are homometric, i.e., have the same vector distance set. Although the investigation is largely based on a discussion of one-dimensional cyclotomic sets, i.e., those in which the points divide the period on the line into rational fractions, it is shown that there are many families of non-cyclotomic pairs and multiplets and that each of these families has its counterpart in two and three dimensions. The significance of these results for practical crystal analysis is discussed.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Determination of Absolute from Relative X-Ray Intensity DataNature, 1942
- A New Synthesis of X-Ray Data for Crystal AnalysisNature, 1942
- Homometric StructuresNature, 1939
- The Application of the Three-Dimensional Patterson Method and the Crystal Structures of Proustite, Ag3AsS3, and Pyrargyrite, Ag3SbS3The Journal of Chemical Physics, 1936