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X‐ray phase determination by the principle of minimum charge
Author(s) -
Elser Veit
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
acta crystallographica section a
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1600-5724
pISSN - 0108-7673
DOI - 10.1107/s0108767398013324
Subject(s) - charge density , phase problem , electron density , maxima and minima , charge (physics) , electron , degenerate energy levels , phase (matter) , quasicrystal , diffraction , maxima , atomic physics , physics , condensed matter physics , mathematics , quantum mechanics , mathematical analysis , art , performance art , art history
When the electron density in a crystal or a quasicrystal is reconstructed from its Fourier modes, the global minimum value of the density is sensitively dependent on the relative phases of the modes. The set of phases that maximizes the value of the global minimum corresponds, by positivity of the density, to the density having the minimum total charge that is consistent with the measured Fourier amplitudes. Phases that minimize the total electronic charge ( i.e. the average electron density) have the additional property that the lowest minima of the electron density become exactly degenerate and proliferate within the unit cell. The large number of degenerate minima have the effect that density maxima are forced to occupy ever smaller regions of the unit cell. Thus, by minimization of the electronic charge, the atomicity of the electron density is enhanced as well. Charge minimization applied to simulated crystalline and quasicrystalline diffraction data successfully reproduces the correct phases starting from random initial phases.

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