Hi all, I have a question about S02 measurement in samples for CN calculation. By example, If I have an oxynitide, LaTiO2N, Can I use TiO2 as standard for S02 even the Ti in LaTiO2N is coordinated to O and N? In a more extreme case, is possible to use metals? Which are the recommendations and limits? Regards, euG 8<- - - - - - 8<- - - - - - 8<- - - - - - 8<- - - - - - Prof. Dr. Eugenio H. Otal UNIDEF - CONICET - CITEDEF San Juan Bautista de La Salle 4397. Villa Martelli (B1603 ALO) Buenos Aires Argentina TEL: +54 11 4709-8158. FAX: +54 11 4709-8241. and UTN - Santa Cruz Regional Faculty Av. Inmigrantes 555 Río Gallegos (9400) Santa Cruz Argentina TEL: +54 2966 429173 FAX: +54 2966 42-9173 E-mail: eugenio.otal@citefa.gov.ar eugenioh@gmail.com 8<- - - - - - 8<- - - - - - 8<- - - - - - 8<- - - - - -
Hi Eugenio, It has generally been found that S02 is transferrable, even from metals to oxides! In practice, the bigger effect is generally sample and measurement issues. For example, if you are measuring powders in transmission and the grain size is larger than a small fraction of the absorption length, then the EXAFS will be suppressed and mimic a smaller S02. If your standard is then a metal foil, the effective S02 for your powder will be smaller than the foil, not because of an intrinsic difference in absorption, but because of the distortion due to grain size. --Scott Calvin Sarah Lawrence College On Jan 11, 2013, at 4:23 AM, Eugenio Otal wrote:
Hi all, I have a question about S02 measurement in samples for CN calculation. By example, If I have an oxynitide, LaTiO2N, Can I use TiO2 as standard for S02 even the Ti in LaTiO2N is coordinated to O and N? In a more extreme case, is possible to use metals? Which are the recommendations and limits? Regards, euG
Dear Scott, thanks for the answer, it will be usefull on the next beamline time. Regards, euG
participants (2)
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Eugenio Otal
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Scott Calvin