Introduction to QXRD: Fundamentals and Applications
What QXRD is
QXRD (Quantitative X-ray Diffraction) is an analytical technique that uses X-ray diffraction patterns to identify crystalline phases and quantify their amounts in multi-phase materials. It extends standard XRD by applying rigorous data-processing, calibration, and modeling to convert diffraction intensities into reliable quantitative phase fractions and crystallographic information.
Core principles
- Bragg’s law: X-rays scattered by crystal planes produce peaks at angles satisfying nλ = 2d sinθ; peak positions identify crystal structures.
- Peak intensity proportionality: Integrated peak intensities relate to phase abundance, atomic scattering factors, structure factors, multiplicity, and preferred orientation.
- Rietveld refinement: A full-pattern fitting method that models the entire diffraction pattern (peak positions, shapes, backgrounds) to refine structural, microstructural, and quantitative parameters simultaneously.
- Calibration and standards: Use of internal or external standards and calibration curves corrects for instrument factors, absorption, and sample preparation biases to improve absolute quantification.
Typical workflow
- Sample preparation: Homogenize, grind, and pack to minimize preferred orientation and particle-size effects.
- Data collection: Select appropriate radiation (Cu Kα common), step size, counting time, and scan range for sufficient peak statistics.
- Preprocessing: Background subtraction, Kα2 stripping (if needed), and instrumental peak broadening correction.
- Phase identification: Match peak positions to databases (ICDD PDF) to list candidate phases.
- Quantification: Apply Rietveld refinement or the Reference Intensity Ratio (RIR) method to compute phase fractions.
- Validation: Check goodness-of-fit metrics, residuals, and perform repeat measurements or standard addition tests.
Common applications
- Cement and concrete: Phase amounts (e.g., alite, belite, portlandite) for quality control and durability studies.
- Ceramics and minerals: Phase purity, polymorph identification, and stoichiometry.
- Metallurgy: Phase fractions in alloys, heat-treatment studies, and development of new materials.
- Battery materials: Quantifying active/inactive phases, degradation products, and lithiation states.
- Thin films & coatings: Phase composition and texture analysis (when combined with grazing-incidence XRD).
Strengths and limitations
- Strengths: Non-destructive; sensitive to crystalline phases; quantitative with proper calibration; provides crystallographic and microstructural parameters.
- Limitations: Insensitive to amorphous content without standards; subject to preferred orientation, particle-size, and absorption errors; requires good reference data and careful sample prep; low detection limits typically ~1–5 wt% depending on phase contrast and data quality.
Practical tips
- Use an internal standard (e.g., corundum) to quantify amorphous fractions.
- Minimize preferred orientation by side-loading or spray-drying powders.
- Increase counting time for low-concentration phases.
- Validate Rietveld results with complementary techniques (SEM/EDS, TEM, thermal analysis).
- Keep an instrument calibration file (zero error, peak broadening) and update regularly.
Further reading / resources
- Rietveld method textbooks and practical guides.
- ICDD PDF for phase identification.
- Software manuals: GSAS-II, TOPAS, FullProf, HighScore.
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