Method
Single crystal X-ray diffraction is a powerful technique, used to study the structure of solids (organic, inorganic or metallorganic). In particular, it provides the type and dimensions of a crystal lattice and the precise positions of atoms in the unit cell. The technique requires single crystal samples (no policrystals, no twinned) of at least 01 x 0.1 x 0.1 mm size. The experiment can be carried out in protected environment in a temperature range 90-400 K. The diffraction experiment normally takes one day of measurement and one day of crystal structure solution and refinement. The ARS team provides a crystallographic information file (cif) for visualization and analysis, tables of atomic positions and bond distances, full description of the experiment in a format ready for publication.
Application
- molecular geometries (bond distances and angles, conformations)
- supramolecular structure (intermolecular interactions, crystal packing)
- absolute configuration (not guaranteed for compounds containing only first and second period atoms)
- crystal morphology and orientation
Service form
A service form is available at:
https://www.xrd.dcbp.unibe.ch/ServiceForm.pdf