Application of the in situ high pressure powder diffraction technique for examination of specific structural properties of nanocrystals based on the experimental data of SiC nanocrystalline powders of 2-30 nm in diameter is presented. Limitations and capabilities of the experimental techniques themselves and methods of diffraction data elaboration applied to nanocrystals with very small dimensions (<30 nm) are discussed. It is shown that a unique value of the lattice parameter cannot be determined for such small crystals using a standard powder diffraction experiment. It is also shown that, due to the complex structure constituting a two-phase, core/surface shell system, no unique compressibility coefficient can satisfactorily describe the behaviour of nanocrystalline powders under pressure. We offer a tentative interpretation of the distribution of macro-and micro-strains in nanoparticles of different grain size.
Fundamental limitations, with respect to nanocrystalline materials, of the traditional elaboration of powder diffraction data like the Rietveld method are discussed. A tentative method of the analysis of powder diffraction patterns of nanocrystals based on the examination of the variation of lattice parameters calculated from individual Bragg lines (named the “
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