| Literature DB >> 31236093 |
Yassine El Mendili1, Antanas Vaitkus2, Andrius Merkys2, Saulius Gražulis2, Daniel Chateigner1, Fabrice Mathevet1, Stéphanie Gascoin1, Sebastien Petit1, Jean-François Bardeau3, Marco Zanatta4, Maria Secchi5, Gino Mariotto4, Arun Kumar4, Michele Cassetta4, Luca Lutterotti5, Evgeny Borovin5, Beate Orberger6, Patrick Simon7, Bernard Hehlen8, Monique Le Guen9.
Abstract
Detailed crystallographic information provided by X-ray diffraction (XRD) is complementary to molecular information provided by Raman spectroscopy. Accordingly, the combined use of these techniques allows the identification of an unknown compound without ambiguity. However, a full combination of Raman and XRD results requires an appropriate and reliable reference database with complete information. This is already available for XRD. The main objective of this paper is to introduce and describe the recently developed Raman Open Database (ROD, http://solsa.crystallography.net/rod). It comprises a collection of high-quality uncorrected Raman spectra. The novelty of this database is its interconnectedness with other open databases like the Crystallography Open Database (http://www.crystallography.net/cod and Theoretical Crystallography Open Database (http://www.crystallography.net/tcod/). The syntax adopted to format entries in the ROD is based on the worldwide recognized and used CIF format, which offers a simple way for data exchange, writing and description. ROD also uses JCAMP-DX files as an alternative format for submitted spectra. JCAMP-DX files are compatible to varying degrees with most commercial Raman software and can be read and edited using standard text editors.Entities:
Keywords: CIF2; DDLm dictionary; Raman spectroscopy; combined Raman–X-ray diffraction; open databases
Year: 2019 PMID: 31236093 PMCID: PMC6557180 DOI: 10.1107/S1600576719004229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Crystallogr ISSN: 0021-8898 Impact factor: 3.304
Figure 1Snapshot of the ROD home page (3 July 2018).
Figure 2Snapshot of the ROD search page.
Figure 3Orientation of Raman microscope polarization axes at the sample and the corresponding Porto notation for non-oriented samples.
Figure 4Raman spectrum and related crystal structure of hematite. ROD ID 1000001, COD ID 1546383.