| Literature DB >> 23596341 |
Brian R Pauw1, Jan Skov Pedersen, Samuel Tardif, Masaki Takata, Bo B Iversen.
Abstract
Monte Carlo (MC) methods, based on random updates and the trial-and-error principle, are well suited to retrieve form-free particle size distributions from small-angle scattering patterns of non-interacting low-concentration scatterers such as particles in solution or precipitates in metals. Improvements are presented to existing MC methods, such as a non-ambiguous convergence criterion, nonlinear scaling of contributions to match their observability in a scattering measurement, and a method for estimating the minimum visibility threshold and uncertainties on the resulting size distributions.Entities:
Keywords: Monte Carlo methods; particle size distribution; small-angle scattering; structure analysis
Year: 2013 PMID: 23596341 PMCID: PMC3627408 DOI: 10.1107/S0021889813001295
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Crystallogr ISSN: 0021-8898 Impact factor: 3.304
Figure 1Optimization of the number of MC contributions (main figure) and (upper right, calculated for 300 contributions) for the Boehmite example data (see §6) by selecting the values requiring the least number of steps. Lines are added to guide the eye.
Figure 2Observability for three unimodal number-weighted size distributions sampled using 50 000 spheres within . The number frequency plot of the size distributions is shown in the inset, with the distributions divided over 50 radius bins and normalized to . A change in slope between and is observed for all three distributions at .
Figure 3Data (black) and MC fit [grey (red in the electronic version of the journal), using and ] for a 1 s measurement in a time series of AlOOH nanoparticles in aqueous solution. The MC fit is at convergence. The background value resulting from the optimization is 2.4 (2) m−1 sr−1.
Figure 4Volume-weighted size distribution as used for the MC fit shown in Fig. 3 ▶, for . Error bars indicate sample standard deviation over 100 repetitions. The minimum visibility threshold is shown as a thick grey (red in the electronic version of the journal) line. The right-hand figures show the effect of selecting and , with a clear effect on as well as the uncertainty estimates.