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Improvement of data treatment in small-angle neutron scattering

Improvement of data treatment in small-angle neutron scattering Small-angle neutron scattering has been successfully used since the 1970s. As a general rule, methods to extract the useful signal from that received by the detector are well known and give good results. At the Laboratoire Leon Brillouin, for example, these methods have been employed for a long time. However, the data reduction software has been changed for the following reasons. Problems are encountered if the container of the sample gives a spurious signal or if the scattering angle is so large that its cosine cannot be approximated by 1. In the present paper, generalizations of formulas are made in order to account for these difficulties. The decrease of scattered intensity delivered by an incoherent sample that is often observed at large angles is shown to be only due to a geometrical effect. The consequent modifications of the relations used for the normalization of cells of position-sensitive detectors and for the absolute calibration are given. As for the inherent background of the sample, the contribution of density fluctuations is usually neglected. This contribution is formally given as a function of the contrast lengths and of the isothermal compressibility of the sample. This new result allows numerical evaluations of the different terms of the inherent sample background. Practical examples are given. Finally, several methods, developed at the Laboratoire Leon Brillouin, are given to determine the background properly. They are based on systematic measurements of transmissions and background levels of suitably prepared blank samples. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Applied Crystallography International Union of Crystallography

Improvement of data treatment in small-angle neutron scattering

Improvement of data treatment in small-angle neutron scattering

Journal of Applied Crystallography , Volume 40 (1): 165 – Jan 12, 2007

Abstract

Small-angle neutron scattering has been successfully used since the 1970s. As a general rule, methods to extract the useful signal from that received by the detector are well known and give good results. At the Laboratoire Leon Brillouin, for example, these methods have been employed for a long time. However, the data reduction software has been changed for the following reasons. Problems are encountered if the container of the sample gives a spurious signal or if the scattering angle is so large that its cosine cannot be approximated by 1. In the present paper, generalizations of formulas are made in order to account for these difficulties. The decrease of scattered intensity delivered by an incoherent sample that is often observed at large angles is shown to be only due to a geometrical effect. The consequent modifications of the relations used for the normalization of cells of position-sensitive detectors and for the absolute calibration are given. As for the inherent background of the sample, the contribution of density fluctuations is usually neglected. This contribution is formally given as a function of the contrast lengths and of the isothermal compressibility of the sample. This new result allows numerical evaluations of the different terms of the inherent sample background. Practical examples are given. Finally, several methods, developed at the Laboratoire Leon Brillouin, are given to determine the background properly. They are based on systematic measurements of transmissions and background levels of suitably prepared blank samples.

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References (25)

Publisher
International Union of Crystallography
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2007 International Union of Crystallography
Subject
small-angle neutron scattering, data analysis, background subtraction, large scattering angles, spurious scattering signals, inherent sample background
ISSN
0021-8898
eISSN
1600-5767
DOI
10.1107/S0021889806051442
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Small-angle neutron scattering has been successfully used since the 1970s. As a general rule, methods to extract the useful signal from that received by the detector are well known and give good results. At the Laboratoire Leon Brillouin, for example, these methods have been employed for a long time. However, the data reduction software has been changed for the following reasons. Problems are encountered if the container of the sample gives a spurious signal or if the scattering angle is so large that its cosine cannot be approximated by 1. In the present paper, generalizations of formulas are made in order to account for these difficulties. The decrease of scattered intensity delivered by an incoherent sample that is often observed at large angles is shown to be only due to a geometrical effect. The consequent modifications of the relations used for the normalization of cells of position-sensitive detectors and for the absolute calibration are given. As for the inherent background of the sample, the contribution of density fluctuations is usually neglected. This contribution is formally given as a function of the contrast lengths and of the isothermal compressibility of the sample. This new result allows numerical evaluations of the different terms of the inherent sample background. Practical examples are given. Finally, several methods, developed at the Laboratoire Leon Brillouin, are given to determine the background properly. They are based on systematic measurements of transmissions and background levels of suitably prepared blank samples.

Journal

Journal of Applied CrystallographyInternational Union of Crystallography

Published: Jan 12, 2007

Keywords: small-angle neutron scattering ; data analysis ; background subtraction ; large scattering angles ; spurious scattering signals ; inherent sample background .

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