short communications
X-ray characterization of α-Fe2O3 single crystals containing 2.2% and 95% 57Fe
aInstitute of Materials Structure Science, High Energy Accelerator Research Organization, Oho 1-1, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305, Japan, bDepartment of Applied Physics, Faculty of Engineering, University of Tokyo, Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113, Japan, and cDepartment of Earth and Space Science, Faculty of Science, Osaka University, Machikaneyama 1-16, Toyonaka, Osaka 560, Japan
*Correspondence e-mail: jiyong@kekvax.kek.jp
α-Fe2O3 single crystals containing 2.2% and 95% 57Fe isotopes were characterized by means of X-ray topography, the diffraction rocking curve and the integrated intensity. These crystals were revealed to be nearly perfect and suitable for a further nuclear-resonant Bragg-scattering study.
Keywords: hematite; single crystals; X-ray topography; rocking curves; integrated intensity.
1. Introduction
Nuclear-resonant Bragg scattering (NBS) of hematite (α-Fe2O3) single crystals containing 57Fe isotopes has been studied for many years by means of the conventional Mössbauer method. With improved growth techniques of the method, highly perfect hematite crystals containing 57Fe enriched to 95% are now available. Their size ranges up to 10 mm × 10 mm. Their crystallographic quality has been characterized by means of X-ray topography by Suzuki et al. (1992). As pointed out by Zhao (1995), the occupied by the non-resonant isotopes 56Fe in hematite can be regarded as `nuclear point defects' in the crystal from the viewpoint of NBS. In order to see the basic X-ray diffraction phenomenon in hematite single crystals with various isotopic contents, nearly perfect crystals are needed. For this study, hematite single crystals with two kinds of 57Fe abundance, one 2.2% and the other 95%, have been successfully grown. Their imperfections have been characterized by X-ray topography, the X-ray rocking curve and the integrated intensity. In this paper, detailed results of their X-ray characterization are described.
2. X-ray topography and rocking-curve measurement
The as-grown crystal surface of a hematite single crystal is a (111)r plane, where the subscript r indicates rhombohedral symmetry. The crystal surface exposed to air during growth was smooth and shining, whereas the opposite side which contacted with the was lusterless and rough. The smooth surface was used in our experiment without further polishing. The two crystal samples used in this experiment are the naturally abundant one with 2.2% 57Fe and 4 × 6 × 0.5 mm in size (referred to as S2.2) and the enriched one with 95% 57Fe and 5 × 6 × 0.5 mm in size (referred to as S95).
The experimental set-up for the double-crystal X-ray topography and rocking-curve measurement is shown in Fig. 1. A laboratory X-ray generator (18 kW) was used and its apparent X-ray source size from an Mo target was 1.0 mm × 1.0 mm. X-rays were monochromated and collimated by an asymmetric reflection of Si 711 so as to form an almost non-dispersive (+,−) setting with hematite (666)r planes, where the difference between their lattice spacings, Δd/d, is 0.26%. An expanded monochromatic beam for taking topographs was obtained after the Si 711 asymmetric diffraction, where the angle between the Bragg plane and the crystal surface α = 20.2° and the asymmetric factor 1/b = 6. Since the magnetic domain in hematite can be aligned into a single domain state (Nathans et al., 1964), an external magnetic field of 1 kGauss, sufficient to saturate the domain in the sample, was applied during the experiment. The X-ray topographs were recorded on nuclear plates (Ilford L4) or X-ray film (Fuji 80). The measured topographs and rocking curves are shown in Figs. 2 and 3, respectively.
Since a topograph taken at each different position of a rocking curve showed only part of the sample, the whole view of the sample was obtained by a multi-exposure in double-crystal topography, as shown in Fig. 2, while changing the angle of the sample along its rocking-curve profile by a step of 4.5 arcsec. The exposure time for each was 30 min while the X-ray generator was running at 55 kV and 240 mA. The indices in Fig. 2 are expressed by hexagonal symmetry. The `zebra' contour lines in Fig. 2(a) correspond to the scanning step. The radius of curvature of S95 could have been estimated from these separate lines. The more precise radius was determined by measuring the peak shift of the rocking curve while scanning a narrow silt (0.1 mm × 0.1 mm) across the monochromatic beam whose size was about 6 mm (H) × 10 mm (V). The bending radii of the diffraction plane of the selected areas, marked with a rectangle in Figs. 2(a) and 2(b), in the samples S95 and S2.2 were determined as approximately 113 m and 39 m, respectively. In the A and C regions in Fig. 2(a), black and white fine striations along the and directions are found intersecting [110] at 45°, while no such contrast was found along the direction. Such contrast is presently under study. In Fig. 2(b) the grain structure of S2.2 could be found, and the largest grain was selected for the rocking-curve measurement. The areas in the rectangular mark correspond to the selected regions where the rocking curves of S95(n) and S2.2(n) in Fig. 3 were taken.
Fig. 3 shows the measured rocking curves of S95 and S2.2. Broken and solid lines correspond to those taken when the second slit in Fig. 1 is fully open or closed to 0.3 × 1.0 mm in size, respectively. The FWHMs in units of arcsec are labelled in the figure. The calculated value of the FWHM by convolution of hematite 666 and Si 711 is 0.68 arcsec. When the X-ray beam illuminates the whole sample region, the widths of the rocking curves S95(w) and S2.2(w) become wider as they are comprised of several grains. When the slit was closed, sharper and narrower rocking curves S95(n) and S2.2(n) were obtained as shown in Figs. 3(a) and 3(b). Their associated FWHMs were 1.5 arcsec and 5.0 arcsec; the deconvoluted FWHMs considering the bending effect were 0.9 arcsec and 3.5 arcsec, respectively.
It can be found from the above measurement that even the present crystal samples contain defects, such as bending and grains; they are highly perfect in some selected areas of the samples.
3. Integrated intensity
In early X-ray diffraction work, the integrated intensity of crystals with different degrees of imperfection has been used to verify the theoretical formulae of the dynamical and kinematical theories (Compton, 1917; Bragg, 1921; James, 1948). Following Zachariasen (1967) and Schneider (1977), if the integrated reflection R equals RD for the applied to a defect-free crystal whose thickness is much larger than the extinction distance, the crystal can be called ideally perfect; if R equals RK for the it can be called ideally imperfect. According to the theories, RD and RK depend on the of a the X-ray wavelength, the polarization factor and the absorption. For an actual crystal, the integrated intensity should lie between these two extremes. In the case of a hematite crystal, the absorption for Mo Kα1 radiation is relatively large and no large difference between RD and RK can be found. From the viewpoint of experimental clarity, using X-rays with λ = 0.32 Å is much more preferable because the absorption of a hematite crystal is relatively weak (μl = 1.55 cm−1) and then the difference of the integrated reflection between RD and RK is great, RK/RD ranging from one to three orders.
Fig. 4 shows the experimental set-up for the integrated intensity measurement at bending-magnet beamline NE5 at AR, KEK. A double-crystal Si(111) monochromator was used during the measurement. The diffraction plane of the sample was perpendicular to the Si(111) diffraction plane; the polarization factor was then P = cos (2θB), where θB is the diffraction of the sample. An ion chamber, IC, was used to monitor the intensity of the incident beam. The integrated reflection of sample S2.2 was measured and the results are shown in Fig. 5, where the (hhh)r reflections with h = 6, 8, 10 and 12 were measured. The abscissae here are the structure factors corrected by the Debye–Waller factor, the coordinates are the products of the integrated reflection and the geometric factor sin 2θB and divided by the polarization factor P. The dotted line RK and the solid line RD are for an ideally imperfect crystal and perfect crystal given by the standard kinematical and theories (e.g. James, 1948; Pinsker, 1978), respectively. The measured integrated reflection R2.2 is shown as the solid circles and the diffraction indices are labelled in the figure. The measured and theoretical integrated reflection, the extinction distance and absorption depth are listed in Table 1.
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The extinction distance lext and the absorption depth labs in the Bragg case are defined as (Kikuta, 1992)
where vc is the volume of the θB is the P is the polarization factor, re is the classical electron radius, λ is the wavelength, Fhkl is the factor, M is the Debye–Waller factor and μl is the linear absorption coefficient.
It can be found from Fig. 5 and Table 1 that the theoretical curves RK and RD are different by two orders due to the difference of the extinction distance and absorption depth. The sample S2.2 was found to be obviously quite perfect because its integrated reflection R2.2 lies nearer to the RD curve, but differs greatly from the RK curve. This reveals that the effective reflection depth of this sample is almost equal to the extinction distance, as shown in Table 1, much smaller than the absorption depth or the sample thickness (500 µm). This suggests that a wave field is formed in quite a thin layer in this sample.
4. Conclusions
Two hematite single crystals containing 57Fe of 2.2% and 95% are characterized by X-ray topography, the rocking curve and the integrated intensity. The results show that the diffraction widths of the present samples are quite narrow and relatively close to their intrinsic width; the integrated reflection of S2.2 is close to a case for λ = 0.32 Å. It has been revealed that the crystals contain defects such as bending defects and those formed by grains; selected grains were found to be highly perfect and therefore suitable for further NBS measurements.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Dr K. Hyodo for his help during the experiment at AR-NE5. This work was supported in part by a Grant-in-Aid for Specially Promoted Research and a Grant-in-Aid for JSPS fellows from the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports, Japan.
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