I don't know anything about CeO2, but...for me there is something wrong
since the Athena fitting, because there are too many peaks below the main
one, and specially below 1 A. Am I right or not?
Maria Elena
2010/5/13 Frenkel, Anatoly
There is a large number of articles explaining how to fit CeO2 including discussions why multi-electron excitatoins complicate the fit, and some of those authors (e.g., A. Soldatov, but also M. Benfatto) propose first principle methods that account for those. Some papers even show that ignoring those contributions may give a decent fit, but you should be aware of the multitudes of theoretical issues surrounding EXAFS modeling of this system before trying it on your own.
Anatoly
________________________________
From: ifeffit-bounces@millenia.cars.aps.anl.gov on behalf of mohamed sobhy Sent: Thu 5/13/2010 5:21 PM To: ifeffit@millenia.cars.aps.anl.gov Subject: [Ifeffit] fitting
Dear all I am trying to use artemis to do fitting to CeO2. But really I cant get the right way to do that. During the fitting, I am using amp as set and change in N degeneracy of the path. attached is the best fit i got but it still not good and the chi-square is 41.109065479 so can you suggest me what to do
thanks
Mohamed
_______________________________________________ Ifeffit mailing list Ifeffit@millenia.cars.aps.anl.gov http://millenia.cars.aps.anl.gov/mailman/listinfo/ifeffit
-- María Elena Dra. María Elena Montero Cabrera Departamento de Medio Ambiente y Energía Centro de Investigación en Materiales Avanzados (CIMAV) Miguel de Cervantes 120, Compl. Ind. Chihuahua Chihuahua CP 31109, Chih. México Tel (614) 4391123