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Published in

International Union of Crystallography, Journal of Applied Crystallography, 3(47), p. 1107-1117, 2014

DOI: 10.1107/s1600576714008218

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XRDUA: Crystalline phase distribution maps by two-dimensional scanning and tomographic (micro) X-ray powder diffraction

Journal article published in 2014 by Wout De Nolf, Frederik Vanmeert ORCID, Koen Janssens ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

Imaging of crystalline phase distributions in heterogeneous materials, either plane projected or in virtual cross sections of the object under investigation, can be achieved by scanning X-ray powder diffraction employing X-ray micro beams and X-ray-sensitive area detectors. Software exists to convert the two-dimensional powder diffraction patterns that are recorded by these detectors to one-dimensional diffractograms, which may be analysed by the broad variety of powder diffraction software developed by the crystallography community. However, employing these tools for the construction of crystalline phase distribution maps proves to be very difficult, especially when employing micro-focused X-ray beams, as most diffraction software tools have mainly been developed having structure solution in mind and are not suitable for phase imaging purposes.XRDUAhas been developed to facilitate the execution of the complete sequence of data reduction and interpretation steps required to convert large sequences of powder diffraction patterns into a limited set of crystalline phase maps in an integrated fashion.