On Tuesday 15 May 2007, Mauro Rovezzi wrote:
Dear all,
Do you know if in literature there are studies on the important multiple scattering (MS) paths in fitting wurtzite XAFS spectra? I mean which are the important paths to properly fit a wurtzite structure up to 6 A in a elegant way (<20 paths)?
I'm asking this question thinking at old works by Filipponi et al. on the fcc and bcc structures explaining very well the importance of some specific triangular and collinear paths to fit the EXAFS spectrum...
Well, this was my coffee-break question :)
OK, let me make a cup of coffee for myself .... Mmmmmm ... espresso! Now I'm ready to offer an answer. I would say that one of the best features of Artemis is that it makes it easy to examine the MS paths. You don't have to place faith in the literature -- you can go look at the paths themselves. It is very easy to import data and import a large number of paths. Then you can make useful, interesting plots with relatively little effort. You don't even have to do a fit to get a sense of which paths are big and which are small. Once you start actually doing some fits, it fairly simple to throw paths in the mix, take paths out, and tweak the fitting model. Again, you don't have to take on faith which paths are important. You can evaluate fits with and without certain paths and decide for yourself which ones are important. There is a rule of thumb that you need the SS, the (nearly) collinear MS, and the short triangles. In my experience, that rule of thumb is surprisingly effective. Shelly uses an interesting approach, which is described on page 25 of this PDF file: http://xafs.org/Tutorials?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=Basics_of_XAFS_analysis.pdf It involves filtering paths on the basis of Feff's approximation of the amplitude, another technique that is surprisingly effective. HTH, B -- Bruce Ravel ---------------------------------------------- bravel@anl.gov Molecular Environmental Science Group, Building 203, Room E-165 MRCAT, Sector 10, Advanced Photon Source, Building 433, Room B007 Argonne National Laboratory phone and voice mail: (1) 630 252 5033 Argonne IL 60439, USA fax: (1) 630 252 9793 My homepage: http://cars9.uchicago.edu/~ravel EXAFS software: http://cars9.uchicago.edu/~ravel/software/