International
Tables for Crystallography Volume B Reciprocal space Edited by U. Shmueli © International Union of Crystallography 2006 |
International Tables for Crystallography (2006). Vol. B. ch. 2.4, pp. 266-267
Section 2.4.3.2. Violation of Friedel's law
a
Molecular Biophysics Unit, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore 560 012, India, and bRaman Research Institute, Bangalore 560 080, India |
Consider a structure containing N atoms of which P are normal atoms and the remaining Q anomalous scatterers. Let denote the contribution of the P atoms to the structure, and and the real and imaginary components of the contribution of the Q atoms. The relation between the different contributions to a reflection h and its Friedel equivalent is illustrated in Fig. 2.4.3.2. For simplicity we assume here that all Q atoms are of the same type. The phase angle of is then exactly ahead of that of . The structure factors of h and are denoted in the figure by and , respectively. In the absence of anomalous scattering, or when the imaginary component of the dispersion correction is zero, the magnitudes of the two structure factors are equal and Friedel's law is obeyed; the phase angles have equal magnitudes, but opposite signs. As can be seen from Fig. 2.4.3.2, this is no longer true when has a nonzero value. Friedel's law is then violated. A composite view of the vector relationship for h and can be obtained, as in Fig. 2.4.3.3, by reflecting the vectors corresponding to about the real axis of the vector diagram. and corresponding to the two reflections superpose exactly, but do not. and then have different magnitudes and phases.
It is easily seen that Friedel's law is obeyed in centric data even when anomalous scatterers are present. and are then parallel to the real axis and perpendicular to it. The vector sum of the three components is the same for h and . It may, however, be noted that the phase angle of the structure factor is then no longer 0 or . Even when the structure is noncentrosymmetric, the effect of anomalous scattering in terms of intensity differences between Friedel equivalents varies from reflection to reflection. The difference between and is zero when or . The difference tends to the maximum possible value when .
Intensity differences between Friedel equivalents depend also on the ratio (in terms of number and scattering power) between anomalous and normal scatterers. Differences obviously do not occur when all the atoms are normal scatterers. On the other hand, a structure containing only anomalous scatterers of the same type also does not give rise to intensity differences. Expressions for intensity differences between Friedel equivalents have been derived by Zachariasen (1965) for the most general case of a structure containing normal as well as different types of anomalous scatterers. Statistical distributions of such differences under various conditions have also been derived (Parthasarathy & Srinivasan, 1964; Parthasarathy, 1967). It turns out that, with a single type of anomalous scatterer in the structure, the ratio has a maximum mean value when the scattering powers of the anomalous scatterers and the normal scatterers are nearly the same (Srinivasan, 1972). Also, for a given ratio between the scattering powers, the smaller the number of anomalous scatterers, the higher is the mean ratio.
References
Parthasarathy, S. (1967). Expectation value of the Bijvoet ratio. Acta Cryst. 22, 98–103.Google ScholarParthasarathy, S. & Srinivasan, R. (1964). The probability distribution of Bijvoet differences. Acta Cryst. 17, 1400–1407.Google Scholar
Srinivasan, R. (1972). Applications of X-ray anomalous scattering in structural studies. In Advances in structure research by diffraction methods, Vol. 4, edited by W. Hoppe & R. Mason, pp. 105–197. Braunschweig: Freidr. Vieweg & Sohn; and Oxford: Pergamon Press.Google Scholar
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