Ewald's sphere

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Template:Short description The Ewald sphere is a geometric construction used in electron, neutron, and x-ray diffraction which shows the relationship between:

It was conceived by Paul Peter Ewald, a German physicist and crystallographer.[1] Ewald himself spoke of the sphere of reflection.[2] It is often simplified to the two-dimensional "Ewald's circle" model or may be referred to as the Ewald sphere.

Ewald construction

File:Ewald3.png
Ewald sphere construction

A crystal can be described as a lattice of atoms, which in turn leads to the reciprocal lattice. With electrons, neutrons or x-rays there is diffraction by the atoms, and if there is an incident plane wave exp(2πik𝟎𝐫)Template:Efn with a wavevector k𝟎, there will be outgoing wavevectors k𝟏 and k𝟐 as shown in the diagram[3] after the wave has been diffracted by the atoms.

The energy of the waves (electron, neutron or x-ray) depends upon the magnitude of the wavevector, so if there is no change in energy (elastic scattering) these have the same magnitude, that is they must all lie on the Ewald sphere. In the Figure the red dot is the origin for the wavevectors, the black spots are reciprocal lattice points (vectors) and shown in blue are three wavevectors. For the wavevector k𝟏 the corresponding reciprocal lattice point g𝟏 lies on the Ewald sphere, which is the condition for Bragg diffraction. For k𝟐 the corresponding reciprocal lattice point g𝟐 is off the Ewald sphere, so k𝟐=k𝟎+g𝟐+𝐬 where 𝐬 is called the excitation error. The amplitude and also intensity of diffraction into the wavevector k𝟐 depends upon the Fourier transform of the shape of the sample,[3][4] the excitation error 𝐬, the structure factor for the relevant reciprocal lattice vector, and also whether the scattering is weak or strong. For neutrons and x-rays the scattering is generally weak so there is mainly Bragg diffraction, but it is much stronger for electron diffraction.[3][5]

See also

References

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Notes

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External links

Template:Crystallography

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