Hi Ed, In case it’s not clear, ATOMS is built in to Artemis. (Long, long ago ATOMS was a separate program, so many people still refer to that functionality of Artemis by that name.) —Scott Calvin Sarah Lawrence College
On Aug 9, 2016, at 12:40 PM, Matthew Marcus
wrote: There are two different input files which take the extension .inp. One is the feff.inp file, which is the input to FEFF and contains a list of coordinates (Cartesian, not crystallographic) of all atoms surrounding an absorpber atom out to a certain distance. ATOMS produces this. The other is an input file for ATOMS, which has a subset of the information found in a CIF file. ATOMS can save this out as well once you fill in the form, and you can thus re-use it if, for instance, you want to re-run ATOMS to produce a feff.inp file for a different site as absorber. ATOMS is the only program I know that produces FEFF files. mam
On 8/9/2016 9:26 AM, Ed Han wrote:
I see. Thank you for the insight!
Is it possible to create the same .inp or .cif file in FEFF6 (or any of the FEFF versions) as well?
Or is the ATOMS program the most recommended software to perform this task?
Regards, Ed Han
On Mon, Aug 8, 2016 at 5:12 PM, Carlo Segre
mailto:segre@iit.edu> wrote: Hi Ed:
You do not need to start with a CIF file at all. All you need is the space group, the lattice constants and the atomic positions. You can then fillin the blanks for the Atoms program yourself.
Carlo
On Mon, 8 Aug 2016, Ed Han wrote:
Hello All,
I apologize in advance if this is not the correct method to reply to the thread.
Thank you for your replies and suggestions. I will look further into determining the atomic structure of the Hf-Al intermetallics through their papers.
Once I obtain this information, how do I go about creating the actual CIF file? Can I just open up any arbitrary CIF file and then change the parameters and name to match that of the Hf-Al systems?
Lastly, going through some CIF files from crystallography.net http://crystallography.net, I notice that some of the 3D models from the CIF has a different stoichiometry from the designated crystal. For example, I have attached a CIF file of SiO2 that I have found; however, the 3D representation only has 1 Silicon atom and 1 Oxygen atom. Do you have any insight on this disparity?
Regards, Ed Han
-- Carlo U. Segre -- Duchossois Leadership Professor of Physics Interim Chair, Department of Chemistry Director, Center for Synchrotron Radiation Research and Instrumentation Illinois Institute of Technology Voice: 312.567.3498 tel:312.567.3498 Fax: 312.567.3494 tel:312.567.3494 segre@iit.edu mailto:segre@iit.edu http://phys.iit.edu/~segre segre@debian.org mailto:segre@debian.org
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