Abstract
Site-specific radiation damage on anomalously scattering sites can be used to generate additional phase information in standard single- or multi-wavelength anomalous diffraction (SAD or MAD) experiments. In this approach the data are kept unmerged, down to the Harker construction, and the evolution of site-specific radiation damage as a function of X-ray irradiation is explicitly modelled and refined in real space. Phasing power is generated through the intensity differences of symmetry-related reflections or repeated measurements of the same reflection recorded at different X-ray doses. In the present communication the fundamentals of this approach are reviewed and different models for the description of site-specific radiation damage are presented. It is shown that, in more difficult situations, overall radiation damage may unfold on a time scale that is similar to the evolution of site-specific radiation damage or to the total time that is required to record a complete data set. In such cases the quality of the phases will ultimately be limited by the effects of overall radiation damage. © 2007 International Union of Crystallography Printed in Singapore - all rights reserved.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Schiltz, M., & Bricogne, G. (2007). Modelling and refining site-specific radiation damage in SAD/MAD phasing. In Journal of Synchrotron Radiation (Vol. 14, pp. 34–42). https://doi.org/10.1107/S0909049506038970
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.