Recovering local structure information from high-pressure total scattering experiments

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Abstract

High pressure is a powerful thermodynamic tool for exploring the structure and the phase behaviour of the crystalline state, and is now widely used in conventional crystallographic measurements. High-pressure local structure measurements using neutron diffraction have, thus far, been limited by the presence of a strongly scattering, perdeuterated, pressure-transmitting medium (PTM), the signal from which contaminates the resulting pair distribution functions (PDFs). Here, a method is reported for subtracting the pairwise correlations of the commonly used 4:1 methanol:ethanol PTM from neutron PDFs obtained under hydro­static compression. The method applies a molecular-dynamics-informed empirical correction and a non-negative matrix factorization algorithm to recover the PDF of the pure sample. Proof of principle is demonstrated, producing corrected high-pressure PDFs of simple crystalline materials, Ni and MgO, and benchmarking these against simulated data from the average structure. Finally, the first local structure determination of α-quartz under hydro­static pressure is presented, extracting compression behaviour of the real-space structure.

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Herlihy, A., Geddes, H. S., Sosso, G. C., Bull, C. L., Ridley, C. J., Goodwin, A. L., … Funnell, N. P. (2021). Recovering local structure information from high-pressure total scattering experiments. Journal of Applied Crystallography, 54, 1546–1554. https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600576721009420

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