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Debye–Waller factor

The Debye–Waller factor (DWF), named after Peter Debye and Ivar Waller, is used in condensed matter physics to describe the attenuation of x-ray scattering or coherent neutron scattering caused by thermal motion.[1][2] It is also called the B factor, atomic B factor, or temperature factor. Often, "Debye–Waller factor" is used as a generic term that comprises the Lamb–Mössbauer factor of incoherent neutron scattering and Mössbauer spectroscopy.

The DWF depends on the scattering vector q. For a given q, DWF(q) gives the fraction of elastic scattering; 1 – DWF(q) correspondingly gives the fraction of inelastic scattering. (Strictly speaking, this probability interpretation is not true in general.[3]) In diffraction studies, only the elastic scattering is useful; in crystals, it gives rise to distinct Bragg reflection peaks. Inelastic scattering events are undesirable as they cause a diffuse background — unless the energies of scattered particles are analysed, in which case they carry valuable information (for instance in inelastic neutron scattering or electron energy loss spectroscopy).

The basic expression for the DWF is given by

where u is the displacement of a scattering center, and denotes either thermal or time averaging.

Assuming harmonicity of the scattering centers in the material under study, the Boltzmann distribution implies that is normally distributed with zero mean. Then, using for example the expression of the corresponding characteristic function, the DWF takes the form

Note that although the above reasoning is classical, the same holds in quantum mechanics.

Assuming also isotropy of the harmonic potential, one may write

where q, u are the magnitudes (or absolute values) of the vectors q, u respectively, and is the mean squared displacement. In crystallographic publications, values of are often given where . Note that if the incident wave has wavelength , and it is elastically scattered by an angle of , then

In the context of protein structures, the term B-factor is used. The B-factor is defined as

[4]

It is measured in units of Å2. The B-factors can be taken as indicating the relative vibrational motion of different parts of the structure. Atoms with low B-factors belong to a part of the structure that is well ordered. Atoms with large B-factors generally belong to part of the structure that is very flexible. Each ATOM record (PDB file format) of a crystal structure deposited with the Protein Data Bank contains a B-factor for that atom.

Derivation

Introduction

Scattering experiments are a common method for learning about crystals. Such experiments typically involve a probe (e.g. X-rays or neutrons) and a crystalline solid. A well-characterized probe propagating towards the crystal may interact and scatter away in a particular manner. Mathematical expressions relating the scattering pattern, properties of the probe, properties of the experimental apparatus, and properties of the crystal then allow one to derive desired features of the crystalline sample.

The following derivation is based on chapter 14 of Simon's The Oxford Solid State Basics[5] and on the report Atomic Displacement Parameter Nomenclature by Trueblood et al.[6] (available under #External links). It is recommended to consult these sources for a more explicit discussion. Background on the quantum mechanics involved may be found in Sakurai and Napolitano's Modern Quantum Mechanics.[7]

Scattering experiments often consist of a particle with initial crystal momentum   incident on a solid. The particle passes through a potential distributed in space,  , and exits with crystal momentum  . This situation is described by Fermi's golden rule, which gives the probability of transition per unit time,  , to the energy eigenstate   from the energy eigenstate   due to the weak perturbation caused by our potential  .

 . (1)

By inserting a complete set of position states, then utilizing the plane-wave expression relating position and momentum, we find that the matrix element is simply a Fourier transform of the potential.

  . (2)

Above, the length of the sample is denoted by  . We now assume that our solid is a periodic crystal with each unit cell labeled by a lattice position vector   . Position within a unit cell is given by a vector   such that the overall position in the crystal may be expressed as  . Because of the translational invariance of our unit cells, the potential distribution of every cell is identical and  .

  . (3)

Laue equation

According to the Poisson summation formula:

  . (4)

  is a reciprocal lattice vector of the periodic potential and   is the volume of its unit cell. By comparison of (3) and (4), we find that the Laue equation must be satisfied for scattering to occur:

 . (5)

(5) is a statement of the conservation of crystal momentum. Particles scattered in a crystal experience a change in wave vector equal to a reciprocal lattice vector of the crystal. When they do, the contribution to the matrix element is simply a finite constant. Thus, we find an important link between scattered particles and the scattering crystal. The Laue condition, which states that crystal momentum must be conserved, is equivalent to the Bragg condition  , which demands constructive interference for scattered particles. Now that we see how the first factor of (3) determines whether or not incident particles are scattered, we consider how the second factor influences scattering.

Structure factor

The second term on the right hand side of (3) is the structure factor.

  . (6)

For a given reciprocal lattice vector (corresponding to a family of lattice planes labeled by Miller indices  ), the intensity of scattered particles is proportional to the square of the structure factor.

  . (7)

Buried in (6) are detailed aspects of the crystal structure that are worth distinguishing and discussing.

Debye–Waller factor

Consideration of the structure factor (and our assumption about translational invariance) is complicated by the fact that atoms in the crystal may be displaced from their respective lattice sites. Taking the scattering potential to be proportional to the density of scattering matter, we rewrite the structure factor.

  . (8)

The integral from here onwards is understood to be taken over the unit cell.   is the density of scattering matter. The angle brackets indicate a temporal average of each unit cell followed by a spatial average over every unit cell. We further assume that each atom is displaced independently of the other atoms.

  . (9)

The number of atoms in the unit cell is   and the occupancy factor for atom   is  .   represents the point in the unit cell for which we would like to know the density of scattering matter.   is the density of scattering matter from atom   at a position separated from the nuclear position   by a vector  .   is the probability density function for displacement.   is the reference lattice site from which atom   may be displaced to a new position  . If   is symmetrical enough (e.g. spherically symmetrical),   is simply the mean nuclear position. When considering X-ray scattering, the scattering matter density consists of electron density around the nucleus. For neutron scattering, we have  -functions weighted by a scattering length   for the respective nucleus (see Fermi pseudopotential). Note that in the above discussion, we assumed the atoms were not deformable. With this in mind, (9) may be plugged into expression (8) for the structure factor.

 ;   . (10)

Now we see the overall structure factor may be represented as a weighted sum of structure factors   corresponding to each atom. Set the displacement between the location in space for which we would like to know the scattering density and the reference position for the nucleus equal to a new variable  . Do the same for the displacement between the displaced and reference nuclear positions  . Substitute into (10).

  . (11)

Within the square brackets of (11), we convolve the density of scattering matter of atom   with the probability density function for some nuclear displacement. Then, in the curly brackets, we Fourier transform the resulting convolution. The final step is to multiply by a phase depending on the reference (e.g. mean) position of atom  . But, according to the convolution theorem, Fourier transforming a convolution is the same as multiplying the two Fourier transformed functions. Set the displacement between the location in space for which we would like to know the scattering density and the position for the nucleus equal to a new variable  .

  . (12)

Substitute (12) into (10).

  . (13)

That is:

 ;   ,   . (14)

  is the atomic form factor of the atom  ; it determines how the distribution of scattering matter about the nuclear position influences scattering.   is the atomic Debye–Waller factor; it determines how the propensity for nuclear displacement from the reference lattice position influences scattering. The expression given for   in the article's opening is different because of 1) the decision to take the thermal or time average, 2) the arbitrary choice of negative sign in the exponential, and 3) the decision to square the factor (which more directly connects it to the observed intensity).

Anisotropic displacement parameter, U

A common simplification to (14) is the harmonic approximation, in which the probability density function is modeled as a Gaussian. Under this approximation, static displacive disorder is ignored and it is assumed that atomic displacements are determined entirely by motion (alternative models in which the Gaussian approximation is invalid have been considered elsewhere[8]).

 ;  ;  . (15)

We've dropped the atomic index.   belongs to the direct lattice while   would belong to the reciprocal lattice. By choosing the convenient dimensionless basis  , we guarantee that   will have units of length and describe the displacement. The tensor   in (15) is the anisotropic displacement parameter. With dimension (length) , it is associated with mean square displacements. For the mean square displacement along unit vector  , simply take  . Related schemes use the parameters   or B rather than   (see to Trueblood et al.[6] for a more complete discussion). Finally, we can find the relationship between the Debye–Waller factor and the anisotropic displacement parameter.

 . (16)

From equations (7) and (14), the Debye–Waller factor   contributes to the observed intensity of a diffraction experiment. And based on (16), we see that our anisotropic displacement factor   is responsible for determining  . Additionally, (15) shows that   may be directly related to the probability density function   for a nuclear displacement   from the mean position. As a result, it's possible to conduct a scattering experiment on a crystal, fit the resulting spectrum for the various atomic   values, and derive each atom's tendency for nuclear displacement from  .

Applications

 
A 50% probability thermal ellipsoid model of H8Si8O12 constructed with ORTEP-3[9] from a .cif file on ICSD.[10] Analysis following a diffraction experiment consists of fitting to the observed spectrum of scattered particles. U may be refined for each distinct atom during the process. For the above 50% probability model,   in equation (15). This defines a surface of nuclear displacements   for each U. Therefore, we expect each ellipsoid to vary depending on the type and environment of its atom. Note that surfaces represent nuclear displacements; thermal ellipsoid models should not be confused with other models (e.g. electron density, Van der Waals radii). Fewer than 28 atoms are displayed due to redundancy from symmetry considerations.

Anisotropic displacement parameters are often useful for visualizing matter. From (15), we may define ellipsoids of constant probability for which  , where   is some constant. Such "vibration ellipsoids" have been used to illustrate crystal structures.[9] Alternatively, mean square displacement surfaces along   may be defined by  . See the external links "Gallery of ray-traced ORTEP's", "2005 paper by Rowsell et al.", and "2009 paper by Korostelev and Noller" for more images. Anisotropic displacement parameters are also refined in programs (e.g. GSAS-II[11]) to resolve scattering spectra during Rietveld refinement.

References

  1. ^ Debye, Peter (1913). "Interferenz von Röntgenstrahlen und Wärmebewegung". Annalen der Physik (in German). 348 (1): 49–92. Bibcode:1913AnP...348...49D. doi:10.1002/andp.19133480105.
  2. ^ Waller, Ivar (1923). "Zur Frage der Einwirkung der Wärmebewegung auf die Interferenz von Röntgenstrahlen". Zeitschrift für Physik A (in German). 17 (1): 398–408. Bibcode:1923ZPhy...17..398W. doi:10.1007/BF01328696. S2CID 121962265.
  3. ^ Lipkin, Harry (2004). "Physics of Debye-Waller Factors". arXiv:cond-mat/0405023v1.
  4. ^ Bahar, Ivet; Atilgan, Ali Rana; Erman, Burak (1997). "Direct evaluation of thermal fluctuations in proteins using a single-parameter harmonic potential". Folding and Design. 2 (3): 173–181. doi:10.1016/S1359-0278(97)00024-2. PMID 9218955.
  5. ^ Simon, Steven H. (2013-06-20). The Oxford Solid State Basics. ISBN 9780199680771. OCLC 1038069097.
  6. ^ a b Trueblood, K. N.; Bürgi, H. B.; Burzlaff, H.; Dunitz, J. D.; Gramaccioli, C. M.; Schulz, H. H.; Shmueli, U.; Abrahams, S. C. (1996-09-01). "Atomic Displacement Parameter Nomenclature. Report of a Subcommittee on Atomic Displacement Parameter Nomenclature". Acta Crystallographica Section A. 52 (5): 770–781. doi:10.1107/s0108767396005697. ISSN 0108-7673.
  7. ^ Sakurai, J. J.; Napolitano, Jim (2017-09-21). Modern Quantum Mechanics. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781108499996. ISBN 9781108499996.
  8. ^ "3. Beyond the Gaussian Approximation". ww1.iucr.org. Retrieved 2019-05-15.
  9. ^ a b Burnett, M. N.; Johnson, C. K. (1996-07-01). "ORTEP-III: Oak Ridge Thermal Ellipsoid Plot Program for crystal structure illustrations". doi:10.2172/369685. OSTI 369685. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ Törnroos, K. W. (1994-11-15). "Octahydridosilasesquioxane determined by neutron diffraction". Acta Crystallographica Section C. 50 (11): 1646–1648. doi:10.1107/S0108270194005342.
  11. ^ "Help for GSAS-II". subversion.xray.aps.anl.gov. Retrieved 2019-04-30.

External links

  • 2019 paper by Cristiano Malica and Dal Corso. Introduction to Debye–Waller factor and applications within Density Functional Theory - Temperature-dependent atomic B factor: an ab initio calculation
  • Gallery of ray-traced ORTEP's - University of Glasgow
  • 2005 paper by Rowsell et al. depicting metal-organic framework thermal ellipsoids - [1]
  • 2009 paper by Korostelev and Noller depicting tRNA thermal ellipsoids - Analysis of Structural Dynamics in the Ribosome by TLS Crystallographic Refinement
  • Cruickshank's 1956 Acta Crystallogr. paper - The analysis of the anisotropic thermal motion of molecules in crystals
  • 1996 report by Trueblood et al. - Atomic Displacement Parameter Nomenclature 2016-04-30 at the Wayback Machine

debye, waller, factor, named, after, peter, debye, ivar, waller, used, condensed, matter, physics, describe, attenuation, scattering, coherent, neutron, scattering, caused, thermal, motion, also, called, factor, atomic, factor, temperature, factor, often, used. The Debye Waller factor DWF named after Peter Debye and Ivar Waller is used in condensed matter physics to describe the attenuation of x ray scattering or coherent neutron scattering caused by thermal motion 1 2 It is also called the B factor atomic B factor or temperature factor Often Debye Waller factor is used as a generic term that comprises the Lamb Mossbauer factor of incoherent neutron scattering and Mossbauer spectroscopy The DWF depends on the scattering vector q For a given q DWF q gives the fraction of elastic scattering 1 DWF q correspondingly gives the fraction of inelastic scattering Strictly speaking this probability interpretation is not true in general 3 In diffraction studies only the elastic scattering is useful in crystals it gives rise to distinct Bragg reflection peaks Inelastic scattering events are undesirable as they cause a diffuse background unless the energies of scattered particles are analysed in which case they carry valuable information for instance in inelastic neutron scattering or electron energy loss spectroscopy The basic expression for the DWF is given by DWF exp i q u 2 displaystyle text DWF left langle exp left i mathbf q cdot mathbf u right right rangle 2 where u is the displacement of a scattering center and displaystyle langle ldots rangle denotes either thermal or time averaging Assuming harmonicity of the scattering centers in the material under study the Boltzmann distribution implies that q u displaystyle mathbf q cdot mathbf u is normally distributed with zero mean Then using for example the expression of the corresponding characteristic function the DWF takes the form DWF exp q u 2 displaystyle text DWF exp left langle mathbf q cdot mathbf u 2 rangle right Note that although the above reasoning is classical the same holds in quantum mechanics Assuming also isotropy of the harmonic potential one may write DWF exp q 2 u 2 3 displaystyle text DWF exp left q 2 langle u 2 rangle 3 right where q u are the magnitudes or absolute values of the vectors q u respectively and u 2 displaystyle langle u 2 rangle is the mean squared displacement In crystallographic publications values of U displaystyle U are often given where U u 2 displaystyle U langle u 2 rangle Note that if the incident wave has wavelength l displaystyle lambda and it is elastically scattered by an angle of 2 8 displaystyle 2 theta then q 4 p sin 8 l displaystyle q frac 4 pi sin theta lambda In the context of protein structures the term B factor is used The B factor is defined as B 8 p 2 3 u 2 displaystyle B frac 8 pi 2 3 langle u 2 rangle 4 It is measured in units of A2 The B factors can be taken as indicating the relative vibrational motion of different parts of the structure Atoms with low B factors belong to a part of the structure that is well ordered Atoms with large B factors generally belong to part of the structure that is very flexible Each ATOM record PDB file format of a crystal structure deposited with the Protein Data Bank contains a B factor for that atom Contents 1 Derivation 1 1 Introduction 1 2 Laue equation 1 3 Structure factor 1 4 Debye Waller factor 1 5 Anisotropic displacement parameter U 2 Applications 3 References 4 External linksDerivation EditIntroduction Edit Scattering experiments are a common method for learning about crystals Such experiments typically involve a probe e g X rays or neutrons and a crystalline solid A well characterized probe propagating towards the crystal may interact and scatter away in a particular manner Mathematical expressions relating the scattering pattern properties of the probe properties of the experimental apparatus and properties of the crystal then allow one to derive desired features of the crystalline sample The following derivation is based on chapter 14 of Simon s The Oxford Solid State Basics 5 and on the report Atomic Displacement Parameter Nomenclature by Trueblood et al 6 available under External links It is recommended to consult these sources for a more explicit discussion Background on the quantum mechanics involved may be found in Sakurai and Napolitano s Modern Quantum Mechanics 7 Scattering experiments often consist of a particle with initial crystal momentum k displaystyle vec k incident on a solid The particle passes through a potential distributed in space V r displaystyle V vec r and exits with crystal momentum k displaystyle vec k This situation is described by Fermi s golden rule which gives the probability of transition per unit time G k k displaystyle Gamma vec k vec k to the energy eigenstate E k displaystyle E vec k from the energy eigenstate E k displaystyle E vec k due to the weak perturbation caused by our potential V r displaystyle V vec r G k k 2 p ℏ k V k 2 d E k E k displaystyle Gamma vec k vec k frac 2 pi hbar left vert langle vec k V vec k rangle right vert 2 delta E vec k E vec k 1 By inserting a complete set of position states then utilizing the plane wave expression relating position and momentum we find that the matrix element is simply a Fourier transform of the potential k V k 1 L 3 d 3 r V r e i k k r displaystyle langle vec k V vec k rangle frac 1 L 3 int d 3 vec r V vec r e i vec k vec k cdot vec r 2 Above the length of the sample is denoted by L displaystyle L We now assume that our solid is a periodic crystal with each unit cell labeled by a lattice position vector R displaystyle vec R Position within a unit cell is given by a vector x displaystyle vec x such that the overall position in the crystal may be expressed as r R x displaystyle vec r vec R vec x Because of the translational invariance of our unit cells the potential distribution of every cell is identical and V x V x R displaystyle V vec x V vec x vec R k V k 1 L 3 R e i k k R u n i t c e l l d 3 x V x e i k k x displaystyle langle vec k V vec k rangle left frac 1 L 3 sum vec R e i vec k vec k cdot vec R right left int unit cell d 3 vec x V vec x e i vec k vec k cdot vec x right 3 Laue equation Edit According to the Poisson summation formula R e i k R 2 p D v q d k q displaystyle sum vec R e i vec kappa cdot vec R frac 2 pi D v sum vec q delta vec kappa vec q 4 q displaystyle vec q is a reciprocal lattice vector of the periodic potential and v displaystyle v is the volume of its unit cell By comparison of 3 and 4 we find that the Laue equation must be satisfied for scattering to occur k k q displaystyle vec k vec k vec q 5 5 is a statement of the conservation of crystal momentum Particles scattered in a crystal experience a change in wave vector equal to a reciprocal lattice vector of the crystal When they do the contribution to the matrix element is simply a finite constant Thus we find an important link between scattered particles and the scattering crystal The Laue condition which states that crystal momentum must be conserved is equivalent to the Bragg condition m l 2 d sin 8 displaystyle m lambda 2d sin theta which demands constructive interference for scattered particles Now that we see how the first factor of 3 determines whether or not incident particles are scattered we consider how the second factor influences scattering Structure factor Edit The second term on the right hand side of 3 is the structure factor F q u n i t c e l l d 3 x V x e i q x displaystyle F vec q int unit cell d 3 vec x V vec x e i vec q cdot vec x 6 For a given reciprocal lattice vector corresponding to a family of lattice planes labeled by Miller indices h k l displaystyle hkl the intensity of scattered particles is proportional to the square of the structure factor I h k l F h k l 2 displaystyle I hkl propto F hkl 2 7 Buried in 6 are detailed aspects of the crystal structure that are worth distinguishing and discussing Debye Waller factor Edit Consideration of the structure factor and our assumption about translational invariance is complicated by the fact that atoms in the crystal may be displaced from their respective lattice sites Taking the scattering potential to be proportional to the density of scattering matter we rewrite the structure factor F q d 3 x r x e i q x displaystyle F vec q int d 3 vec x langle rho vec x rangle e i vec q cdot vec x 8 The integral from here onwards is understood to be taken over the unit cell r x displaystyle rho vec x is the density of scattering matter The angle brackets indicate a temporal average of each unit cell followed by a spatial average over every unit cell We further assume that each atom is displaced independently of the other atoms r x k 1 N n k d 3 x k r k x x k p k x k x k 0 displaystyle langle rho vec x rangle simeq sum k 1 N n k int d 3 vec x k rho k vec x vec x k p k vec x k vec x k0 9 The number of atoms in the unit cell is N displaystyle N and the occupancy factor for atom k displaystyle k is n k displaystyle n k x displaystyle vec x represents the point in the unit cell for which we would like to know the density of scattering matter r k x x k displaystyle rho k vec x vec x k is the density of scattering matter from atom k displaystyle k at a position separated from the nuclear position x k displaystyle vec x k by a vector x x k displaystyle vec x vec x k p k x k x k 0 displaystyle p k vec x k vec x k0 is the probability density function for displacement x k 0 displaystyle vec x k0 is the reference lattice site from which atom k displaystyle k may be displaced to a new position x k displaystyle vec x k If r k displaystyle rho k is symmetrical enough e g spherically symmetrical x k 0 displaystyle vec x k0 is simply the mean nuclear position When considering X ray scattering the scattering matter density consists of electron density around the nucleus For neutron scattering we have d displaystyle delta functions weighted by a scattering length b k displaystyle b k for the respective nucleus see Fermi pseudopotential Note that in the above discussion we assumed the atoms were not deformable With this in mind 9 may be plugged into expression 8 for the structure factor F q k 1 N n k F k q displaystyle F vec q simeq sum k 1 N n k F k vec q F k q d 3 x d 3 r k r k x x k p k x k x k 0 e i q x displaystyle F k vec q int d 3 vec x left int d 3 vec r k rho k vec x vec x k p k vec x k vec x k0 right e i vec q cdot vec x 10 Now we see the overall structure factor may be represented as a weighted sum of structure factors F k q displaystyle F k vec q corresponding to each atom Set the displacement between the location in space for which we would like to know the scattering density and the reference position for the nucleus equal to a new variable t x x k 0 displaystyle vec t vec x vec x k0 Do the same for the displacement between the displaced and reference nuclear positions u x k x k 0 displaystyle vec u vec x k vec x k0 Substitute into 10 F k q d 3 t d 3 u r k t u p k u e i q t e i q x k 0 displaystyle F k vec q left int d 3 vec t left int d 3 vec u rho k vec t vec u p k vec u right e i vec q cdot vec t right e i vec q cdot vec x k0 11 Within the square brackets of 11 we convolve the density of scattering matter of atom k displaystyle k with the probability density function for some nuclear displacement Then in the curly brackets we Fourier transform the resulting convolution The final step is to multiply by a phase depending on the reference e g mean position of atom k displaystyle k But according to the convolution theorem Fourier transforming a convolution is the same as multiplying the two Fourier transformed functions Set the displacement between the location in space for which we would like to know the scattering density and the position for the nucleus equal to a new variable v x x k t u displaystyle vec v vec x vec x k vec t vec u F k q d 3 v r k v e i q v d 3 u p k u e i q u e i q x k 0 displaystyle F k vec q left int d 3 vec v rho k vec v e i vec q cdot vec v right left int d 3 vec u p k vec u e i vec q cdot vec u right e i vec q cdot vec x k0 12 Substitute 12 into 10 F q k 1 N n k d 3 v r k v e i q v d 3 u p k u e i q u e i q x k 0 displaystyle F vec q sum k 1 N n k left int d 3 vec v rho k vec v e i vec q cdot vec v right left int d 3 vec u p k vec u e i vec q cdot vec u right e i vec q cdot vec x k0 13 That is F q k 1 N n k f k q T k q e i q x k 0 displaystyle F vec q sum k 1 N n k f k vec q T k vec q e i vec q cdot vec x k0 f k q d 3 v r k v e i q v displaystyle f k vec q int d 3 vec v rho k vec v e i vec q cdot vec v T k q d 3 u p k u e i q u displaystyle T k vec q int d 3 vec u p k vec u e i vec q cdot vec u 14 f k q displaystyle f k vec q is the atomic form factor of the atom k displaystyle k it determines how the distribution of scattering matter about the nuclear position influences scattering T k q displaystyle T k vec q is the atomic Debye Waller factor it determines how the propensity for nuclear displacement from the reference lattice position influences scattering The expression given for DWF displaystyle text DWF in the article s opening is different because of 1 the decision to take the thermal or time average 2 the arbitrary choice of negative sign in the exponential and 3 the decision to square the factor which more directly connects it to the observed intensity Anisotropic displacement parameter U Edit A common simplification to 14 is the harmonic approximation in which the probability density function is modeled as a Gaussian Under this approximation static displacive disorder is ignored and it is assumed that atomic displacements are determined entirely by motion alternative models in which the Gaussian approximation is invalid have been considered elsewhere 8 p u d e t U 1 2 p 3 e 1 2 u T U 1 u displaystyle p vec u equiv sqrt frac mathrm det mathsf U 1 2 pi 3 e frac 1 2 vec u mathsf T mathsf U 1 vec u u j 1 3 D 3 j a j a j displaystyle vec u equiv sum j 1 3 Delta xi j a j vec a j U j l D 3 j D 3 l displaystyle mathsf U jl equiv langle Delta xi j Delta xi l rangle 15 We ve dropped the atomic index a j displaystyle vec a j belongs to the direct lattice while a j displaystyle vec a j would belong to the reciprocal lattice By choosing the convenient dimensionless basis a j a j displaystyle a j vec a j we guarantee that D 3 j displaystyle Delta xi j will have units of length and describe the displacement The tensor U displaystyle mathsf U in 15 is the anisotropic displacement parameter With dimension length 2 displaystyle 2 it is associated with mean square displacements For the mean square displacement along unit vector n displaystyle hat n simply take n T U n displaystyle hat n mathsf T mathsf U hat n Related schemes use the parameters b displaystyle beta or B rather than U displaystyle mathsf U see to Trueblood et al 6 for a more complete discussion Finally we can find the relationship between the Debye Waller factor and the anisotropic displacement parameter T q e i q u e 1 2 q u 2 e 1 2 j 1 3 l 1 3 q j a j D 3 j D 3 l a l q l e 1 2 j 1 3 l 1 3 q j a j U j l a l q l displaystyle T vec q langle e i vec q cdot vec u rangle e frac 1 2 langle vec q cdot vec u 2 rangle e frac 1 2 sum j 1 3 sum l 1 3 q j a j langle Delta xi j Delta xi l rangle a l q l e frac 1 2 sum j 1 3 sum l 1 3 q j a j mathsf U jl a l q l 16 From equations 7 and 14 the Debye Waller factor T q displaystyle T vec q contributes to the observed intensity of a diffraction experiment And based on 16 we see that our anisotropic displacement factor U displaystyle mathsf U is responsible for determining T q displaystyle T vec q Additionally 15 shows that U displaystyle mathsf U may be directly related to the probability density function p displaystyle p for a nuclear displacement u displaystyle vec u from the mean position As a result it s possible to conduct a scattering experiment on a crystal fit the resulting spectrum for the various atomic U displaystyle mathsf U values and derive each atom s tendency for nuclear displacement from p displaystyle p Applications Edit A 50 probability thermal ellipsoid model of H8Si8O12 constructed with ORTEP 3 9 from a cif file on ICSD 10 Analysis following a diffraction experiment consists of fitting to the observed spectrum of scattered particles U may be refined for each distinct atom during the process For the above 50 probability model p u 0 5 displaystyle p vec u 0 5 in equation 15 This defines a surface of nuclear displacements u displaystyle vec u for each U Therefore we expect each ellipsoid to vary depending on the type and environment of its atom Note that surfaces represent nuclear displacements thermal ellipsoid models should not be confused with other models e g electron density Van der Waals radii Fewer than 28 atoms are displayed due to redundancy from symmetry considerations Anisotropic displacement parameters are often useful for visualizing matter From 15 we may define ellipsoids of constant probability for which g u T U u displaystyle gamma vec u mathsf T mathsf U vec u where g displaystyle gamma is some constant Such vibration ellipsoids have been used to illustrate crystal structures 9 Alternatively mean square displacement surfaces along n displaystyle hat n may be defined by u 2 n n T U n displaystyle langle vec u 2 rangle hat n hat n mathsf T mathsf U hat n See the external links Gallery of ray traced ORTEP s 2005 paper by Rowsell et al and 2009 paper by Korostelev and Noller for more images Anisotropic displacement parameters are also refined in programs e g GSAS II 11 to resolve scattering spectra during Rietveld refinement References Edit Debye Peter 1913 Interferenz von Rontgenstrahlen und Warmebewegung Annalen der Physik in German 348 1 49 92 Bibcode 1913AnP 348 49D doi 10 1002 andp 19133480105 Waller Ivar 1923 Zur Frage der Einwirkung der Warmebewegung auf die Interferenz von Rontgenstrahlen Zeitschrift fur Physik A in German 17 1 398 408 Bibcode 1923ZPhy 17 398W doi 10 1007 BF01328696 S2CID 121962265 Lipkin Harry 2004 Physics of Debye Waller Factors arXiv cond mat 0405023v1 Bahar Ivet Atilgan Ali Rana Erman Burak 1997 Direct evaluation of thermal fluctuations in proteins using a single parameter harmonic potential Folding and Design 2 3 173 181 doi 10 1016 S1359 0278 97 00024 2 PMID 9218955 Simon Steven H 2013 06 20 The Oxford Solid State Basics ISBN 9780199680771 OCLC 1038069097 a b Trueblood K N Burgi H B Burzlaff H Dunitz J D Gramaccioli C M Schulz H H Shmueli U Abrahams S C 1996 09 01 Atomic Displacement Parameter Nomenclature Report of a Subcommittee on Atomic Displacement Parameter Nomenclature Acta Crystallographica Section A 52 5 770 781 doi 10 1107 s0108767396005697 ISSN 0108 7673 Sakurai J J Napolitano Jim 2017 09 21 Modern Quantum Mechanics Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781108499996 ISBN 9781108499996 3 Beyond the Gaussian Approximation ww1 iucr org Retrieved 2019 05 15 a b Burnett M N Johnson C K 1996 07 01 ORTEP III Oak Ridge Thermal Ellipsoid Plot Program for crystal structure illustrations doi 10 2172 369685 OSTI 369685 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Tornroos K W 1994 11 15 Octahydridosilasesquioxane determined by neutron diffraction Acta Crystallographica Section C 50 11 1646 1648 doi 10 1107 S0108270194005342 Help for GSAS II subversion xray aps anl gov Retrieved 2019 04 30 External links Edit2019 paper by Cristiano Malica and Dal Corso Introduction to Debye Waller factor and applications within Density Functional Theory Temperature dependent atomic B factor an ab initio calculation Gallery of ray traced ORTEP s University of Glasgow 2005 paper by Rowsell et al depicting metal organic framework thermal ellipsoids 1 2009 paper by Korostelev and Noller depicting tRNA thermal ellipsoids Analysis of Structural Dynamics in the Ribosome by TLS Crystallographic Refinement Cruickshank s 1956 Acta Crystallogr paper The analysis of the anisotropic thermal motion of molecules in crystals 1996 report by Trueblood et al Atomic Displacement Parameter Nomenclature Archived 2016 04 30 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Debye Waller factor amp oldid 1118008256, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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