(solid-state physics) A reduction factor for the intensity of coherent (Bragg) scattering of x-rays, neutrons, or electrons by a crystal, arising from thermal motion of the atoms in the lattice.
| Sci-Tech Dictionary: Debye-Waller factor |
(solid-state physics) A reduction factor for the intensity of coherent (Bragg) scattering of x-rays, neutrons, or electrons by a crystal, arising from thermal motion of the atoms in the lattice.
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| Wikipedia: Debye–Waller factor |
The Debye-Waller factor (DWF), named after Peter Debye and Ivar Waller, is used in condensed matter physics to describe the attenuation of x-ray scattering or coherent neutron scattering caused by thermal motion or quenched disorder.[1][2] It has also been called the B factor or the temperature factor. Often, "Debye-Waller factor" is used as a generic term that comprises the Lamb-Mössbauer factor of incoherent neutron scattering and Mössbauer spectroscopy.
The DWF depends on q, the absolute value of the scattering vector q. For a given q, DWF(q) gives the fraction of elastic scattering; 1-DWF(q) correspondingly the fraction of inelastic scattering. In diffraction studies, only the elastic scattering is useful; in crystals, it gives rise to distinct Bragg peaks. Inelastic scattering events are undesirable as they cause a diffuse background — unless the energies of scattered particles are analysed, in which case they carry valuable information (inelastic neutron scattering).
Assuming harmonicity of thermal motion in the material under study, the DWF takes the form
![=\exp\left( -\langle [\mathbf{q}\mathbf{u}(0)]^2 \rangle \right) =
\exp\left( -q^2 \langle [\mathbf{u}(0)]^2 \rangle / 3 \right)](http://wpcontent.answers.com/math/a/8/d/a8d8e265bc17efebb3073eb22eeddff3.png)
where <...> denotes thermal averaging, and u(t) is the displacement of a scattering center as function of time t.
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