IUCrJ (Nov 2014)

Diffuse scattering and partial disorder in complex structures

  • T. R. Welberry,
  • D. J. Goossens

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1107/S205225251402065X
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 6
pp. 550 – 562

Abstract

Read online

The study of single-crystal diffuse scattering (SCDS) goes back almost to the beginnings of X-ray crystallography. Because SCDS arises from two-body correlations, it contains information about local (short-range) ordering in the sample, information which is often crucial in the attempt to relate structure to function. This review discusses the state of the field, including detectors and data collection and the modelling of SCDS using Monte Carlo and ab initio techniques. High-quality, three-dimensional volumes of SCDS data can now be collected at synchrotron light sources, allowing ever more detailed and quantitative analyses to be undertaken, and opening the way to approaches such as three-dimensional pair distribution function studies (3D-PDF) and automated refinement of a disorder model, powerful techniques that require large volumes of low-noise data.

Keywords