you also might circumvent the problem by substituting the angle with 
a distance restraint (Si-Si for Si-O-Si, etc).

best

miguel

On 25 Nov 2008 at 9:39, Brian H. Toby wrote:

> 
> When setting up a bond angle soft constraint in GSAS, one needs to
> input the atomic sequence numbers for the three atoms. However, if two
> of the three atoms are the same and have the equivalent positions
> (e.g., Si-O-Si), the two atoms have the same sequence number from the
> atomic list. GSAS seems to only accept three different atomic sequence
> numbers. What should be done?
> 
> 
> The angle constraints (as opposed to the distance constraints) do not
> allow symmetry to be used. Thus the atoms must be distinct and must be
> adjacent in the asymmetric unit. There is no easy way to constrain an
> angle that involves the same atom twice. 
> 
> This might work, however: I have considered the idea of putting dummy
> atoms (with occupancy zero) into the asymmetric unit and then
> constrain the dummy atom to refine along with the real atom (getting
> the symmetry directions correct). Then one can use the dummy atom in
> the constraint. This should work, but I have not tried it. 
> 
> Brian
> ******************************************************************** B
> ri an H. Toby, Ph.D.                            office: 630-252-5488
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> 
> 
> 
> 
> 

-- 
Miguel Gregorkiewitz
Dip Scienze della Terra, Università
via Laterina 8, I-53100 Siena, Europe
fon +39'0577'233810 fax 233938
email [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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