| Literature DB >> 30407171 |
Koji Ohara1, Satoshi Tominaka1, Hiroki Yamada1, Masakuni Takahashi1, Hiroshi Yamaguchi2, Futoshi Utsuno2, Takashi Umeki2, Atsushi Yao2, Kengo Nakada1, Michitaka Takemoto1, Satoshi Hiroi1, Naruki Tsuji1, Toru Wakihara3.
Abstract
A dedicated apparatus has been developed for studying structural changes in amorphous and disordered crystalline materials substantially in real time. The apparatus, which can be set up on beamlines BL04B2 and BL08W at SPring-8, mainly consists of a large two-dimensional flat-panel detector and high-energy X-rays, enabling total scattering measurements to be carried out for time-resolved pair distribution function (PDF) analysis in the temperature range from room temperature to 873 K at pressures of up to 20 bar. For successful time-resolved analysis, a newly developed program was used that can monitor and process two-dimensional image data simultaneously with the data collection. The use of time-resolved hardware and software is of great importance for obtaining a detailed understanding of the structural changes in disordered materials, as exemplified by the results of commissioned measurements carried out on both beamlines. Benchmark results obtained using amorphous silica and demonstration results for the observation of sulfide glass crystallization upon annealing are introduced. open access.Entities:
Keywords: beamlines; crystallization; disordered materials; pair distribution functions; time-resolved measurements
Year: 2018 PMID: 30407171 PMCID: PMC6225740 DOI: 10.1107/S1600577518011232
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Figure 1Photographs and an illustration of the experimental setups of the flat-panel area-detector apparatus for the analysis of disordered materials. (a) High-resolution mode on BL04B2 with an acoustic levitator. (b) High-Q measurement mode on BL08W with a furnace. (c) A schematic drawing of the apparatus used for in situ PDF analysis.
Comparison of two beamlines for high-energy X-ray diffraction at SPring-8
| Beamline | BL04B2 | BL08W |
|---|---|---|
| Energy (keV) | 61.4 | 115.6 |
| Energy resolution | 5 × 10−3 | 1.5 × 10−3 |
| Photon flux (photons s−1 mm−2) | 9.1 × 1010 | 1.0 × 1013 |
|
| 25, 0.02 | 50, 0.04 |
|
| 12, 0.01 | 25, 0.02 |
Figure 2(a) Total structure factors F(Q) and (b) total correlation function T(r) of amorphous silica obtained on BL04B2 and BL08W using the FPD (1 min), compared with those obtained on BL04B2 using point detectors (3 h). Fourier transforms were carried out for the data for a constant Q max = 26 Å−1 using the Lorch function (Lorch, 1969 ▸). A fit to the first Si—O peak in the X-ray correlation function (Mozzi & Warren, 1969 ▸) is also shown by the red dashed line.
Figure 3Total structure factors F(Q) of amorphous silica on BL04B2. The data were collected with integration periods of 0.5, 10, 30 and 300 s.
Figure 4The main graphical user interface of the data-analysis software (PIXIA), showing results for the Li7P3S11 sulfide glass. (a) The raw two-dimensional image data. (b) The time dependence of the total scattering data as an I(θ, t) plot. (c) A comparison of initial and latest total scattering patterns. (d) The latest relative PDF calculated based on the initial PDF. (e) The time dependence of the relative PDFs.
Figure 5Reduced PDFs G(r) of Li7P3S11 used to investigate its thermal crystallization. The data were collected in the temperature range from 473 to 573 K at annealing rates of 2 and 10 K min−1.
Figure 6Rate law of structural changes in Li7P3S11 in the temperature range from 473 to 573 K at annealing rates of 2 and 10 K min−1. (a) ΔG(r, Δt) was calculated as the difference from G(r) at 373 K in the r range of 15–17 Å. (b) dG/dt was calculated by differentiating ΔG(r, Δt).