Celebrating crystallography
In this section, we invite our readers to tell us about their work, lives and scientific passions, Here, Bob Newport, Professor of Materials Physics at the University of Kent, tells us about the year of crystallography
This is the International Year of Crystallography. There’s an overview of the century-old field in a recent special edition of Nature and in several blogs. In the UK, which has played a leading role throughout, the Royal Institution’s website adds an excellent suite of accessible articles – including a fascinating timeline.
However, I want to celebrate materials which are not crystals: the study of which extends back almost as far and uses many of the same empirical tools.
It is of the essence of a crystal that its atoms are arranged in a very specific way which extends throughout its volume. Thus, if we know the positions of a suitable sub-set of them then we can predict the positions of all the others: we can reliably extrapolate from the microscopic to the macroscopic. For much of the past century, X-ray diffraction was the initial experimental step in this process. The advent of synchrotron X-ray sources like the Diamond facility, allowed much of modern crystallography to flourish. Exploiting the wave-like properties of the neutron, using research facilities such as ISIS and the ILL, adds a new dimension because neutrons scatter from nuclei whereas X-rays interact with an atom’s cloud of electrons – so, we have access to the lighter elements for example.