Quantitative Deviation of Nanocrystals Using the RIR Method in X-ray Diffraction (XRD)

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Abstract

The reference intensity ratio (RIR) method, using X-ray diffraction (XRD), is considered one most of the rapid and convenient approaches for phase quantification in multi-phase mixture, in which nanocrystals are commonly contained in a mixture and cause a broadening of the diffraction peak, while another broadening factor, instrumental broadening, does not attract enough attention in related quantitative analysis. Despite the specimen consisting of 50 wt.% TiO2 nanomaterials (nano-TiO2 ) and 50 wt.% microscale ZnO powder, the nano-TiO2 quantitative result changes from 56.53% to 43.33% that occur as a variation of instrumental broadening are caused by divergence slit adjustment. This deviation could be accounted through a mathematical model that involves instrumental broadening. The research in this paper might provide a useful guide for developing an approach to measure accuracy quantification in unknown multi-phase mixtures.

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Huang, Q., Wang, C., & Shan, Q. (2022). Quantitative Deviation of Nanocrystals Using the RIR Method in X-ray Diffraction (XRD). Nanomaterials, 12(14). https://doi.org/10.3390/nano12142320

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