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1.
J Appl Crystallogr ; 49(Pt 6): 2106-2115, 2016 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27980514

ABSTRACT

A very serious concern of scientists dealing with crystal structure refinement, including theoretical research, pertains to the characteristic bias in calculated versus measured diffraction intensities, observed particularly in the weak reflection regime. This bias is here attributed to corrective factors for phonons and, even more distinctly, phasons, and credible proof supporting this assumption is given. The lack of a consistent theory of phasons in quasicrystals significantly contributes to this characteristic bias. It is shown that the most commonly used exponential Debye-Waller factor for phasons fails in the case of quasicrystals, and a novel method of calculating the correction factor within a statistical approach is proposed. The results obtained for model quasiperiodic systems show that phasonic perturbations can be successfully described and refinement fits of high quality are achievable. The standard Debye-Waller factor for phonons works equally well for periodic and quasiperiodic crystals, and it is only in the last steps of a refinement that different correction functions need to be applied to improve the fit quality.

2.
Nat Commun ; 7: 12261, 2016 08 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27515779

ABSTRACT

The discovery of quasicrystals three decades ago unveiled a class of matter that exhibits long-range order but lacks translational periodicity. Owing to their unique structures, quasicrystals possess many unusual properties. However, a well-known bottleneck that impedes their widespread application is their intrinsic brittleness: plastic deformation has been found to only be possible at high temperatures or under hydrostatic pressures, and their deformation mechanism at low temperatures is still unclear. Here, we report that typically brittle quasicrystals can exhibit remarkable ductility of over 50% strains and high strengths of ∼4.5 GPa at room temperature and sub-micrometer scales. In contrast to the generally accepted dominant deformation mechanism in quasicrystals-dislocation climb, our observation suggests that dislocation glide may govern plasticity under high-stress and low-temperature conditions. The ability to plastically deform quasicrystals at room temperature should lead to an improved understanding of their deformation mechanism and application in small-scale devices.

3.
Acta Crystallogr A Found Adv ; 71(Pt 2): 161-8, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25727864

ABSTRACT

The generalized Penrose tiling is, in fact, an infinite set of decagonal tilings. It is constructed with the same rhombs (thick and thin) as the conventional Penrose tiling, but its long-range order depends on the so-called shift parameter (s ∈ 〈0; 1)). The structure factor is derived for the arbitrarily decorated generalized Penrose tiling within the average unit cell approach. The final formula works in physical space only and is directly dependent on the s parameter. It allows one to straightforwardly change the long-range order of the refined structure just by changing the s parameter and keeping the tile decoration unchanged. This gives a great advantage over the higher-dimensional method, where every change of the tiling (change in the s parameter) requires the structure model to be built from scratch, i.e. the fine division of the atomic surfaces has to be redone.

4.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24675600

ABSTRACT

The structure of decagonal Al-Cu-Rh has been studied as a function of temperature by in-situ single-crystal X-ray diffraction in order to contribute to the discussion on energy or entropy stabilization of quasicrystals. The experiments were performed at 293, 1223, 1153, 1083 and 1013 K. A common subset of 1460 unique reflections was used for the comparative structure refinements at each temperature. A comparison of the high-temperature datasets suggests that the best quasiperiodic ordering should exist between 1083 and 1153 K. However, neither the refined structures nor the phasonic displacement parameter vary significantly with temperature. This indicates that the phasonic contribution to entropy does not seem to play a major role in the stability of this decagonal phase in contrast to other kinds of structural disorder, which suggests that, in this respect, this decagonal phase would be similar to other complex intermetallic high-temperature phases.

5.
Acta Crystallogr A Found Adv ; 70(Pt 2): 181-5, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24572319

ABSTRACT

The structure of quasicrystals is aperiodic. Their diffraction patterns, however, can be considered periodic. They are composed solely of series of peaks which exhibit a fully periodic arrangement in reciprocal space. Furthermore, the peak intensities in each series define the so-called `envelope function'. A Fourier transform of the envelope function gives an average unit cell, whose definition is based on the statistical distribution of atomic coordinates in physical space. If such a distribution is lifted to higher-dimensional space, it becomes the so-called atomic surface - the most fundamental feature of higher-dimensional analysis.

6.
Acta Crystallogr B ; 68(Pt 6): 578-89, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23165594

ABSTRACT

A comparative single-crystal X-ray diffraction structure analysis of the family of Al-Cu-Me (Me = Co, Rh and Ir) decagonal quasicrystals is presented. In contrast to decagonal Al-Cu-Co, the other two decagonal phases do not show any structured disorder diffuse scattering indicating a higher degree of order. Furthermore, the atomic sites of Rh and Ir can be clearly identified, while Cu and Co cannot be distinguished because of their too similar atomic scattering factors. The structure models, derived from charge-flipping/low-density elimination results, were refined within the tiling-decoration method but also discussed in the five-dimensional embedding approach. The basic structural building units of the closely related structures are decagonal clusters with 33 Å diameter, which are consistent with the available electron-microscopic images. The refined structure models agree very well with the experimental data.

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