Abstract
Modulated enhanced diffraction (MED) is a technique allowing the dynamic
structural characterization of crystalline materials subjected to an external
stimulus, which is particularly suited for in situ and operando structural
investigations at synchrotron sources. Contributions from the (active) part of the
crystal system that varies synchronously with the stimulus can be extracted by an
offline analysis, which can only be applied in the case of periodic stimuli and
linear system responses. In this paper a new decomposition approach based on
multivariate analysis is proposed. The standard principal component analysis
(PCA) is adapted to treat MED data: specific figures of merit based on their
scores and loadings are found, and the directions of the principal components
obtained by PCA are modified to maximize such figures of merit. As a result, a
general method to decompose MED data, called optimum constrained
components rotation (OCCR), is developed, which produces very precise
results on simulated data, even in the case of nonperiodic stimuli and/or
nonlinear responses. The multivariate analysis approach is able to supply in one
shot both the diffraction pattern related to the active atoms (through the OCCR
loadings) and the time dependence of the system response (through the OCCR
scores). When applied to real data, OCCR was able to supply only the latter
information, as the former was hindered by changes in abundances of different
crystal phases, which occurred besides structural variations in the specific case
considered. To develop a decomposition procedure able to cope with this
combined effect represents the next challenge in MED analysis.
Anno
2015
Autori IAC
Tipo pubblicazione
Altri Autori
Rocco Caliandro, Pietro Guccione, Giovanni Nico, Gokmur Tutuncu, Jonathan C. Hanson
Editore
Blackwell
Rivista
Journal of applied crystallography (Online)