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X-ray diffraction techniques provide powerful tools for the study of lattice defects in crystals. For the case of clustered defects, many of these techniques are based on the scattering properties of the strained regions surrounding the defects rather than on the scattering from the defects themselves. This is particularly true of Huang diffuse scattering, anomalous transmission, and lattice-parameter measurements; the interpretation of these measurements, therefore, relies on a detailed knowledge of the strains around the defects. The Fourier-transformed, long-range strain fields entering into the Huang diffuse scattering can be expressed in terms of the dipole force model, and in this work comparisons of calculations based on this model with measured scattering from spherical precipitates and dislocation loops in copper are reviewed. The use of integral diffuse scattering measurements, made with a two-axis diffractometer, are discussed in terms of a direct analysis of the defect systems in the form of defect concentrations and size distributions and this procedure is applied to the study of the effects of irradiation conditions and post-irradiation annealing on the defect distributions in neutron-irradiated copper. The relation of these diffuse scattering measurements to lattice parameter, anomalous transmission, electron microscopy and electrical resistivity measurement is also discussed.
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