As Pamela Whitfield indicates below, this is not a straightforward issue.  
Reading the reference in Dr. DM's posting, one see that it is necessary to have 
"100% crystalline" or "100% amorphous" or "50% crystalline/50% amorphous" 
standards.  The rub is that it is necessary to have a means to determine if 
something is precisely "100" or "50" or another amount.  In order to do that, 
one must have a standard....which is circular logic....and which illustrates at 
least part of the problem.
 
Further, the concept of "para-crystallinity" also includes materials which are 
not well-behaved and 3-dimensionally ordered substances.  This is 
well-recognized in "high polymer" systems, but it also occurs in organic and 
inorganic materials.  How does one assess the "crystallinity" of a material 
which is not 3-dimensionally ordered when a "reference" for that material has 
3-dimensional ordering?
 
Frank May
Research Investigator
Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry
University of Missouri - St. Louis
One University Boulevard
St. Louis, Missouri  63121-4499
 
314-516-5098
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wed 2/27/2008 9:58 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Fw: % Crystallinity




(See attached file: XRD Percent Crystallinity Determination in
Polymers.pdf)
PERCENT CRYSTALLINITY DETERMINATION BY XRD THE MOST ACCURATE ONE AS IT
CONSIDERS AMORPHOUS PART DURING CALCULATION , IN OTHER METHODS IT IS
IGNORED , HAPPY TO GET VALUE ADDED COMMENT FROM ALL RESERACHER WHO ARE
EXPERT ON THIS FIELD.
Regards,
Dr. DM




----- Forwarded by Debabrata Mukhopadhyay/hpl/IN on 02/28/2008 09:08 AM
-----
 
                                                                          




This is a can of worms that keeps cropping up now and again.  Rather than
go into masses of detail I'd suggest looking at the Rietveld mailing list
archive for some fairly detailed discussions on the subject.  I'd go with
Bob's route as it's applicable in a laboratory environment but foolproof it
isn't and good sample preparation is vital.

Pam

________________________________

From: Von Dreele, Robert B. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wed 27/02/2008 11:52 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: % Crystallinity



John (& others),
The best way to determine %crystallinity (or %amorphous) is to do "spiking"
experiments with material with known (preferably ~100%) crystallinity. The
change in the apparent phase fractions by Bragg intensities as compared to
that expected from the masses can be used to estimate the fraction that
doesn't Bragg scatter (i.e. the amorphous content). The spiking material
should also be chosen to have nearly matching absorption to avoid
systematic effects (e.g. Brindley corrections). It does not have to be the
same phase as the crystalline phase in your sample. There are literature
references to this but I can't recall the exact ones to look at. Perhaps
others might know them better. (BTW - this is not a PDF problem).
Bob Von Dreele

________________________________

From: john o callaghan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wed 2/27/2008 5:58 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: % Crystallinity


Dear Users,
I'm trying to determine the percentage crystallinity in a
crystalline/amorphous mixture, could someone point me in a foolproof
direction.

Thanks,
John


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