letters to the editor
Response to Zbigniew Kaszkur's comment on the article The nanodiffraction problem
aApplied Physics and Applied Mathematics, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA, bNational Synchrotron Light Source II, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY 11973, USA, and cDepartment of Physics, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada
*Correspondence e-mail: icn2@columbia.edu
Keywords: nanoparticles; diffraction; lattice parameters; accuracy; precision.
In a previous article (Öztürk et al., 2015) we showed that the classical Lorenz factor (LF = 1/cosθ) and its extensions are inapplicable for correcting diffraction patterns from nanoparticles with diameters, D, smaller than 20 nm. However, Kaszkur (2019) suggests that in our article The nanodiffraction problem (Xiong et al., 2018) `the correct comparison should be made between the thin-film case and the Debye formula multiplied by sin(2θ)'. This factor, termed the `single-crystal Lorenz factor', accounts for the change in the irradiated volume of the crystal as a function of 2θ (Reynolds, 1986). Since the diffraction patterns in our previous article were simulated assuming an infinite number of crystallites in the powder and an infinitely large slab of finite thickness irradiated by a plane wave for the thin-film case, we do not consider such a correction theoretically justified. Nevertheless, we tested Kaszkur's hypothesis using numerical simulations. Fig. 1(a) shows the expected diffraction pattern for a monodisperse powder sample consisting of infinitely many, ideal, Au spheroids, 5 nm in diameter, computed using the modified Debye formalism (https://github.com/wojdyr/debyer) with Cr Kα radiation. The variation of the suggested correction factor, CF = sin(2θ), over this angular range and the corrected intensity profile obtained by multiplying the Debye intensity profile with this factor are also plotted. In Fig. 1(b) the lattice parameter errors, Δahkl = ahkl − aideal, computed from the individual peak positions for these two profiles are shown. We do not see any improvement over the uncorrected results. We observed similar results for (corrected) patterns computed using other wavelengths and for full-pattern fitting. For larger-diameter (D > 20 nm) particles, we recovered the original lattice parameter without using any corrections. We conclude that (i) applying the `Lorenz correction' to computed nanoparticle powder patterns requires further study and (ii) the hypothesis put forward by Kaszkur (2019) cannot be used to correct the patterns reported in our current article (Xiong et al., 2018). We hope that our article, and this exchange in Journal of Applied Crystallography, will stimulate the development of a rigorous theoretical framework for the analysis of nanocrystalline diffraction patterns. Until such a framework is in place, results from such systems should be treated with caution given, also, that significant details of the distribution of unit-cell parameters within nanoparticles are eliminated during diffraction averaging (Xiong et al., 2019).
References
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