Advertisements
Advertisements
Question
‘Crystal acts as three dimensional grating for X-rays’, explain.
Solution
⦁ Since the wavelength of X-rays is in the order of 1 A° , ordinary grating which has 6000 lines per cm cannot produce an appreciable diffraction pattern of X-rays.
⦁ Therefore, in the case of X-rays, instead of ordinary grating crystals gratings are used. In crystal grating atoms are arranged at lattice points in a regular fashion.
⦁ These arranged atoms correspond to grating lines and the distance between two atoms is the grating element, in the order of le cm.
⦁ The crystal grating differs from optical grating in such a way that in crystal grating, the atomic centres are not in one plane but are distributed in 3-dimensional space. But in optical grating, they are limited to one plane.
⦁ Hence, crystal act as three dimensional grating with X-rays
APPEARS IN
RELATED QUESTIONS
Explain analysis of crystal structure using Bragg’s X ray spectrometer
Why X-rays are used to study the crystal structure?
Derive Bragg's condition for X-ray diffraction. Monochromatic X rays are
incident on a crystal. If the first order rejection is observed at an angle of 3.4•, at
what angle would second order reflection expected.