Question about EXAFS fitting of mixtures
Dear all, While fitting EXAFS for tiny Pt nanoparticles, a simple question occurred to me. For these two scenarios: 1. All Pt atoms are coordinated to 3 O atoms and 3 Pt atoms each. 2. Half of the Pt atoms are coordinated to 6 O atoms and half to 6 Pt atoms. If we fit only single-scattering paths, would it be possible to tell apart these two scenarios with EXAFS fitting? What about linear combination analysis of the XANES? Thank you, Soyoung
EXAFS fit will not tell apart. XANES analysis with or without LCA will.
On Mon, May 15, 2023 at 7:09 PM Soyoung Kim
Dear all,
While fitting EXAFS for tiny Pt nanoparticles, a simple question occurred to me. For these two scenarios: 1. All Pt atoms are coordinated to 3 O atoms and 3 Pt atoms each. 2. Half of the Pt atoms are coordinated to 6 O atoms and half to 6 Pt atoms.
If we fit only single-scattering paths, would it be possible to tell apart these two scenarios with EXAFS fitting? What about linear combination analysis of the XANES?
Thank you, Soyoung
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That question reminds me of a Russian riddle: In each corner of a room there is a cat. In the eyes of each cat there are three cats. On the tail of each cat there is a cat. How many cats are there? Anatoly
On May 15, 2023, at 7:09 PM, Soyoung Kim
wrote: Dear all,
While fitting EXAFS for tiny Pt nanoparticles, a simple question occurred to me. For these two scenarios: 1. All Pt atoms are coordinated to 3 O atoms and 3 Pt atoms each. 2. Half of the Pt atoms are coordinated to 6 O atoms and half to 6 Pt atoms.
If we fit only single-scattering paths, would it be possible to tell apart these two scenarios with EXAFS fitting? What about linear combination analysis of the XANES?
Thank you, Soyoung
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Thank you for the replies. That's what I thought too. And good point, XANES will be different for the two scenarios and it would not matter whether the analysis is by LCA. (For the cat riddle, is it four cats in a circle with each cat in each corner of a very small room? Not sure if I'm getting the point of the riddle.) If there are significant contributions from multiple scatterings in the EXAFS, it would be possible to distinguish the two scenarios with EXAFS, right? But practically, I feel it would be difficult unless the data quality is very high. Best, Soyoung On Mon, May 15, 2023, 6:33 PM Anatoly Frenkel < anatoly.frenkel@stonybrook.edu> wrote:
That question reminds me of a Russian riddle: In each corner of a room there is a cat. In the eyes of each cat there are three cats. On the tail of each cat there is a cat. How many cats are there?
Anatoly
On May 15, 2023, at 7:09 PM, Soyoung Kim
wrote: Dear all,
While fitting EXAFS for tiny Pt nanoparticles, a simple question occurred to me. For these two scenarios: 1. All Pt atoms are coordinated to 3 O atoms and 3 Pt atoms each. 2. Half of the Pt atoms are coordinated to 6 O atoms and half to 6 Pt atoms.
If we fit only single-scattering paths, would it be possible to tell apart these two scenarios with EXAFS fitting? What about linear combination analysis of the XANES?
Thank you, Soyoung
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participants (3)
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Anatoly Frenkel
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Qingying Jia
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Soyoung Kim