Elements of X-ray DiffractionIntended to acquaint the reader with the theory of x-ray diffraction, the experimental methods involved, and the main applications. The book is a collection of principles and methods stressing X-ray diffraction rather than metallurgy. The book is written entirely in terms of the Bragg law and can be read without any knowledge of the reciprocal lattice. It is divided into three main parts— Fundamentals; experimental methods; and applications. Designed for beginners, not as a reference tool for the advanced reader. |
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Page 45
... zone axis , and the zone , i.e. , the set of planes , is specified by giving the indices of the zone axis . Such planes may have quite different indices and spacings , the only requirement being their parallelism to a line . Figure 2-12 ...
... zone axis , and the zone , i.e. , the set of planes , is specified by giving the indices of the zone axis . Such planes may have quite different indices and spacings , the only requirement being their parallelism to a line . Figure 2-12 ...
Page 74
... zone are coplanar and at right angles to the zone axis . Consequently , the poles of planes of a zone will all lie on the same great circle on the projection , and the axis of the zone will be at 90 ° from this great circle ...
... zone are coplanar and at right angles to the zone axis . Consequently , the poles of planes of a zone will all lie on the same great circle on the projection , and the axis of the zone will be at 90 ° from this great circle ...
Page 243
... zone and , by means of the Greninger chart , we can plot directly the axis of this zone without plotting the poles of any of the planes belonging to it . The procedure is illustrated in Fig . 8-9 . Keeping the centers of film and chart ...
... zone and , by means of the Greninger chart , we can plot directly the axis of this zone without plotting the poles of any of the planes belonging to it . The procedure is illustrated in Fig . 8-9 . Keeping the centers of film and chart ...
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Common terms and phrases
absorption alloy angle applied arrangement atoms axes axis calculated called camera cause circle consider constant contains corresponding counter counting crystal cubic curve depends described determined diffracted beam diffraction lines diffractometer direction distance effect electron elements energy equal equation error example factor figure film given grain hexagonal incident beam increases indices intensity involved kind lattice Laue less located material means measured metal method normal Note observed obtained occur orientation origin parallel parameter particular pattern percent phase photographic plane pole position possible powder produced projection radiation rays reciprocal reference reflection region relation relative result rotation sample scattering sheet shown shown in Fig shows simple single solid solution spacing specimen sphere standard stress structure surface temperature texture transmission tube twin unit cell usually various vector voltage wave wavelength x-ray zone