Download citation
Download citation
link to html
Direct methods applied to powder diffraction data often provide well located heavy atoms and unreliable light-atom positions. The completion of the crystal structure is then not always straightforward and may require a considerable amount of user intervention. The heavy-atom connectivity provided by the trial solution may be used to guess the nature of the coordination polyhedra. A Monte Carlo procedure is described which, in the absence of a well defined structural model, is able to locate the light atoms correctly under the restraints of the experimental heavy-atom connectivity model. The correctness of the final model is assessed by criteria based on the agreement between the whole experimental diffraction pattern and the calculated one. The procedure requires little CPU computing time and has been implemented as a routine of EXPO [Altomare et al. (1999). J. Appl. Cryst. 32, 339-340]. The method has proved to be sufficiently robust against the distortion of the coordination polyhedra and has been successfully applied to some test structures.

Follow J. Appl. Cryst.
Sign up for e-alerts
Follow J. Appl. Cryst. on Twitter
Follow us on facebook
Sign up for RSS feeds