Dear Falk
You cannot treat this with a crystallography point of view. In this structure, the two sites are basically the same crystallographically and so you will get nowhere by swapping them and generating a new calculation. You must generate a cluster first and then manually swap atoms around or replace them in order to make a disordered environment.
However, in this case you really only have one thing you can measure: that is the ratio of A to B neighbors around A and the ratio of B to A neighbors around B.
In the ideal ordered structure, you will only have A around B and vice versa in the first shell. You can measure this if you have a sufficient contrast between A and B and a theoretical path for each case.
You can do this by generating a FEFF input file for the ordered structure around the target atom, say A and then replacing one or more of the B atoms near it with A atoms before running the FEFF calculation. This will give you two paths with which to work. If you have data for the B atom edge too, you can do the same for its environment and then you can model the two edges together with some constraints. Finally, you can move to the second (and maybe third) shell to get a more extended model. The parameters you obtain can give you a clue as to the degree of disorder.
Carlo
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Sent from my Android phone with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
"Meutzner, Falk"
Hi Falk,
On Tue, Aug 7, 2012 at 8:42 AM, Meutzner, Falk
wrote: Dear IFEFFIT Community,
is there a way to calculate the spectrum for chemically disordered systems? We have a simple binary bcc structure. It crystallises either in superstructure (CsCl) or chemically disordered (W type) with both atoms randomly taking part of either (0,0,0) or (0.5,0.5,0.5). It is easy to get the superstructured model for artemis, but we have no clue how to model the disordered system...
Thanks a lot for your help, we really appreciate it.
Best regards Falk
Feff generates the EXAFS contributions for an individual atom in a cluster of atoms. To model a range of local structures that an atomic species might have in a disordered (or even moderately complex ordered structure, such as two inequivalent sites in a unit cell), one has to do a calculation for each candidate environment for the absorbing species and average the results accordingly.
To model the disordered system, I think you would need to run one calculation with the central atom at the (0, 0, 0) site and one at the (1/2, 1/2, 1/2) site. You can then add the weighted contributions from the corresponding paths from each calculation. One of the things EXAFS might be able to distinguish (depending on the Z contrast of the atoms in your structure) is whether one site is preferred over another.
I hope that helps get you started. If not, perhaps a more concrete question would help.
--Matt _____________________________________________
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