posted on 2021-04-23, 18:04authored byChristopher
J. “CJ” Wright, Eric Dooryhée, Lucas A. Pressley, W. Adam Phelan, Peter G. Khalifah, Simon J. L. Billinge
Here,
we present an automated and rapid method for nondestructive
mapping of crystal grains in a rod-shaped sample. The approach was
designed for application to in situ float-zone crystal
growth experiments at an X-ray synchrotron source but could be useful
in other applications. The methods have been tested on a TiO2 boule grown in an optical float-zone furnace. The approach applies
a statistical filter to polycrystalline diffraction patterns on two-dimensional
(2D) detectors to rapidly determine the degree of powder quality of
the signal. When larger crystals emerge in the growth, their position,
size, and shape can be tracked using an automated blob-tracking algorithm
that follows individual Bragg peaks as a function of position in a
grid scan, even when multiple crystals are contributing spots to diffraction
images. This method is found to be robust as the same crystal shape
can be independently reconstructed using different sets of Bragg reflections.
Image segmentation methods are then used to map out the polycrystalline
grains. We also note that other information about crystal quality,
such as mosaicity or strain state, may be inferred and mapped from
the intensity variation of the Bragg peaks at different locations
within the sample.