I-Ray: The Scherrer For Particle Size
I-Ray: The Scherrer For Particle Size
I-Ray: The Scherrer For Particle Size
PHYSICAL REVIEW
VOLUME 56
A. L. PATTERsON
of Physics, J3ryn Mawr College, Bryn Maser, Pennsylvania
(Received July 24, 1939)
An exact derivation of the Scherrer equation is given for particles of spherical shape, values
of the constant for half-value breadth and for integral breadth being obtained. Various approximation methods which have been used are compared with the exact calculation. The
tangent plane approximation of v. Laue is shov n to be quite satisfactory, but some doubt is
cast on the use of approximation functions. It is suggested that the calculation for the ellipsoidal
particle based on the tangent plane approximation will provide a satisfactory basis for future
work.
1.
INTRODUCTION
" 'N
B=E7/(L
cos x/2),
(1)
~(x) =
)t "I
+(&') I'/(&'IHI'~o)
XdAidA2dA3,
'P.
=+A;b;,
A ~),
U; = 3II;(2~&;
&IHI
(2a)
(2b)
(2c)
2irgbfb;
2
I
= 4vrmb~gb;2 = pi,
(3b)
(3c)
(3d)
978
SCHERRER FORMULA
Under such conditions, we may transform the
integral (2a) to polar coordinates (p, 8, q&) with
the vector
(cf. v. Laue, ' Eq. (28a) and Eq. (8)
below) as polar vector, when it takes the form
(0+6 k) IHt
)=JI
k
II
Jt Jl
*)I'/ 'I
Following
6=(gh;b~)/I Ph;b;I.
v. Laue, ' Eq. (32), we may
(8)
then write'
IHI
2~
Ir
)(p'
J(,) = Jt
sin 8dpd8:dy.
e(R)
oRdR,
5 /v]
can be carried
2x
J(x) =6k
I+(U;) I'
sin 8d6dp,
(4)
R'=+M
n=
2foI
HI p
q cos I1.
(5a)
3Pa'k H
I
sin ada
pg
= RodRo
(2&)
(2~k; A;)'=QU
(10a)
(1ob)
Ke
note that in the special case of cubic symmetry and under the conditions (3) the quantity
8/g takes the form ll/rI=A=2Makb.
W. L. Bragg' was led to make a further
of the discussion by considering
simplification
only the intensity of the x-rays reHected while
the vector H is in the same direction as the
vector G. With this assumption we have simply
(5b)
We then have (omitting a factor which is constant for a given whole-numbered point)
J(x) = t
I@(Ro) I'RodRo,
in which
5=sin (xo/2)
o
sin
(X/2),
(7a)
(7b)
6 = 2Makb,
Q = 23''ah~.
The exact evaluation
of this integral
spherical particle will be given below.
3.
CALCULATION
Instead of
(2a)
(Io+rQ) IHI,
integral taken
integral
(7c)
fo(A;)
(7d)
for the
J(X)
BY APPROXIMATION
METHODS
OF
Although
(12a)
= Co(coo'R'+1) '
(12b)
fo(A;)
ooooR')
Co(1
R'(coo
Rg )cv3
co
'
(12c)
A. L. PATTERSON
980
integral breadth
W dehned by
(13)
(cf. I, Eq. (18)) has the same value for the approximation function and for the interference
function to be approximated.
Jones' (Section V (2)) has also made use of the
approximation functions (12a) and (12b), but he
chooses values for au such that the approximation
function and the interference function give the
same value for the integral breadth (in the scale
of 8) for the function J(x) for the axial planes.
4.
(sin Ro
'. (14)
Ro cos Ro)
J(X) = 6
4t
(sin
4L(sin
Q Q cos P)'+Q'
sin'
(15)
leads to
6)
Q).
(16)
Exact (16)
Bragg (17)
"I.
TABLE
4.189
3.770
I. Scherrer
constants.
1.333
1.200
3.477
3.630
1.107
1.155
"
TABLE
II. Sckerrer
V. LAUE
fg(A;)
f2(A;)
fs(~s)
JONES
0.455
0.550
0.305
0.423
0.750
0 255
V. LAUE
JONES
1.333
1.241 1.333
1.817 1.333
1.115 1.333
functions.
V. LAUE
JONES
1.107
1.166 1.252
1.157 0.849
1.133 1.353
RANDALL
FUSON,
982
normal to the faces of that form. If the assumption of an ellipsoidal particle is well-founded, the
breadth should vary in the way suggested by
(lob). If not, the departures from the ellipsoidal
shape can be examined in the light of Table II
of the preceding paper' and an indication of the
actual particle shape can be obtained.
AND
DENNISON
VOLUM E 56
H, M.
RANDALL,
AND
D. M.
DENNIsoN
I.
INTRODUCTION
its vapor state. Information concerning the molecule as a whole is largely limited to studies of the
absorption frequencies occurring in the infra-red
spectrum. The
region of the electromagnetic
vibration-rotation
bands of H~0 have been
examined a number of times. ' Since the discovery2
of the heavy hvdrogen isotope, H' 'often called
deuterium, D), similar studies' have been made
f,
~ Now
at Rutgers University.
' W. W. Sleator, Astrophys.
3
J. W. Ellis and B. W. Sorge, J. Chem. Phys. 2, 559
(1934); T. Shidei, Phys. and Math. Soc. of Japan Proc. 10,
a410 (1937).
4 H.
Rubens, Berliner Ber. S: 8 (1931);H. Witt, Zeits. f.
Physik 28, 245 (1924); M. Czerny, Zeits. f. Physik 34, 232
(1925); J. Kuhne, Zeits. f. Physik 84, 722 (1933);N. Wright
and H. M. Randall, Phys. Rev. 44, 391. (1933); Barnes,
Benedict and Lewis, Phys. Rev. 4"/, 918 (1935).
~ Randall,
Dennison, Ginsberg and Weber, Phys. Rev.
52, 160 (1937) (this paper will hereafter be referred to as
RDGW).