X-ray crystallography is the science of determining the arrangement of
atoms within a
crystal from the manner in which a beam of
X-rays is scattered from the
electrons within the crystal. The method produces a three-dimensional picture of the density of electrons within the crystal, from which the mean atomic positions, their
chemical bonds, their disorder and sundry other information can be derived. By definition, a crystal is a solid in which a particular arrangement of atoms (its
unit cell) is repeated indefinitely along
three principal directions known as the basis (or lattice) vectors, which are not necessarily perpendicular. A wide variety of materials can form crystals — such as
salts,
metals,
minerals,
semiconductors, as well as various inorganic, organic and biological
molecules — which has made X-ray crystallography fundamental to many scientific fields.
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STUDIO DELLA STRUTTURA DEI CRISTALLI PER MEZZO DELLA DIFFRAZIONE DEI RAGGI X