This book is an account of crystal symmetry and optical and e-ray diffraction techniques for examining single crystals. It includes the solution of crystal structures by the current methods, worked examples of crystal structure determination, problems and solutions for each chapter.
Structure Determination by X-Ray Crystallography
β Scribed by M. F. C. Ladd, R. A. Palmer (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1985
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 518
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xxiii
Crystal Geometry. I....Pages 1-56
Crystal Geometry. II....Pages 57-104
Preliminary Examination of Crystals by Optical and X-Ray Methods....Pages 105-152
Intensity of Scattering of X-Rays by Crystals....Pages 153-194
Methods in X-Ray Structure Analysis. I....Pages 195-211
Methods in X-Ray Structure Analysis. II....Pages 213-294
Direct Methods and Refinement....Pages 295-369
Examples of Crystal Structure Analysis....Pages 371-410
Back Matter....Pages 411-502
β¦ Subjects
Crystallography
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>Crystallography may be described as the science of the structure of materiΒ als, using this word in its widest sense, and its ramifications are apparent over a broad front of current scientific endeavor. It is not surprising, therefore, to find that most universities offer some aspects of crystal
<p>Crystallography may be described as the science of the structure of materiΒ als, using this word in its widest sense, and its ramifications are apparent over a broad front of current scientific endeavor. It is not surprising, therefore, to find that most universities offer some aspects of crystal
<p>X-ray crystallography provides us with the most accurate picture we can get of atomic and molecular structures in crystals. It provides a hard bedrock of structural results in chemistry and in mineralogy. In biology, where the structures are not fully crystalline, it can still provide valuable re
<p>X-ray crystallography provides us with the most accurate picture we can get of atomic and molecular structures in crystals. It provides a hard bedrock of structural results in chemistry and in mineralogy. In biology, where the structures are not fully crystalline, it can still provide valuable re