Thanks to all who replied regarding experiences with phantom crystals
(objects with crystal-like morphologies but NO diffraction).  The
answers were more fascinating than the original poorly worded inquiry
deserved.  Here is a recap.

 

The observation of phantoms may be rare but not so rare: a number of
people replied with first hand experience.  Classes of compounds that
may lead to these bad actors:  membrane-associated proteins and RNAs.
NO diffraction may be interpreted as no OBSERVABLE Bragg diffraction,
but beware of behind-the-beamstop diffraction; i.e. a few Bragg peaks
that are not typically observed unless care is taken to insure a small
beamstop.  

 

I think of a mental image as follows.  Say proteins are spherically
shaped and present as cats' eyes marbles.  You might be able to lay them
down in a perfect HCP lattice but rotationally the eyes might point in
all directions.  The object at macroscopic dimensions would look like a
crystal but at atomic dimensions there would be no buildup of scattering
from cooperative effect of many atoms at the same lattice spacing.

 

Thanks to all.

 

George

 

George T. DeTitta, Ph.D. 

Principal Research Scientist

Hauptman-Woodward Institute 

Professor and Chairman

Department of Structural Biology

SUNY at Buffalo

700 Ellicott Street Buffalo NY 14203-1102 USA

(716) 898-8600 (voice)

(716) 898-8660 (fax)

www.hwi.buffalo.edu <http://www.hwi.buffalo.edu> 

 

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