Dear Mathew,
The 104 plane in calcite corresponds to the most intense reflection that is
related, in turn, to the best "spacing" or "separation" between atomic "layers"
along which the cleavage may occur. This is not a strict rule, of course, as
real cleavage planes may be different depending o
Thanks for your replies.
Husin, is there any justification for the use of the 104 direction in
calcite, other than this is the direction that works? I'm all for doing it
if it works, but I'd like a little theoretical backup.
Thanks Daniel. I'll put something together for a look-see. What correcti
I would like to pass on word that there are fellowships available for younger
scientists based at US institutions (recipients need not be a US citizen) for
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either as a poster or talk – at the Congress, and will be expe
Dear Matthew,
Following to Professor Daniel Chateigner 's email, I would like to highlight
briefly that the preferred orientation (PO) directions for calcite (CaCO3) that
we used during the refinement using GSAS were
· <104> for X-ray diffraction data, and
· <001> for neutron
Hi Matthew,
You would perhaps prefer physically meaningfull PO correction using
standard functions, at disposal in Maud. If you can give me an ascii
double column of your data I'll give it a trial.
daniel
Le 25/03/2014 11:43, Matthew Rowles a écrit :
Hi all
I have a sample containing a fra
Hi all
I have a sample containing a fraction of calcite. My research tells me that
calcite cleaves on {10-11}.
How can I express this as an hkl for the March-Dollase PO correction?
By inspection, {104} is the direction that orients. Is that correct? How
can I derive that?
Thanks
Matthew Rowl