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Orientational order of liquids and glasses via fluctuation diffraction

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 06:00 authored by Andrew MartinAndrew Martin
Liquids, glasses and other amorphous matter lack long-range order, which makes them notoriously difficult to study. Local atomic order is partially revealed by measuring the distribution of pairwise atomic distances, but this measurement is insensitive to orientational order and unable to provide a complete picture of diverse amorphous phenomena, such as supercooling and the glass transition. Fluctuation scattering with electrons and X-rays is able provide this orientational sensitivity, but it is difficult to obtain clear structural interpretations of fluctuation data. Here we show that the interpretation of fluctuation diffraction data can be simplified by converting it into a real-space angular distribution function. We calculate this function from simulated diffraction of amorphous nickel, generated with a classical molecular dynamics simulation of the quenching of a high temperature liquid state. We compare the results of the amorphous case to the initial liquid state and to the ideal f.c.c. lattice structure of nickel. We show that the extracted angular distributions are rich in information about orientational order and bond angles. The diffraction fluctuations are potentially measurable with electron sources and also with the brightest X-ray sources, like X-ray free-electron lasers.

Funding

The impact of structural dynamics on three-dimensional bioimaging with X-ray free-electron lasers

Australian Research Council

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History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1107/S2052252516016730
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 20522525

Journal

IUCrJ

Volume

4

Start page

24

End page

36

Total pages

13

Publisher

International Union of Crystallography

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 International Union of Crystallography

Former Identifier

2006082658

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2018-09-20

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