06.02: When the Single Crystal Diffraction Experiment Leaves Questions

Lectures

Room 101CF

Tuesday, May 25




14:00 - 14:10 PM
Opening Remarks. M.J. Heeg and R.C. Haltiwanger.

14:10 - 14:30 PM 06.02.01
(E0015)
A.L. Spek.
What is a Routine Crystal Structure Determination?

14:30 - 14:50 PM 06.02.02
(E0063)
Kenneth J. Haller.
Be Creative; Work Hard; Use All the Information.

14:50 - 15:10 PM 06.02.03
(W0101)
Judith L. Flippen-Anderson.
Crystals are from Mars - Data is from Venus.
et al: Jeffrey R. Deschamps, Clifford George, Richard Gilardi.

15:10 - 15:30 PM 06.02.04
(E0019)
Charles H. Winter.
X-Ray Crystallography as an Essential Tool in the Pursuit of Synthetic Inorganic, Organometallic, and Materials Chemistry.

15:30 - 15:50 PM
Coffee Break.

15:50 - 16:10 PM 06.02.06
(E0092)
Ouyang Xiang.
Use of Powder X-ray and Electron Diffraction to aid in Crystal Structure Determinations from Poor Crystals.
et al: Abraham Clearfied.

16:10 - 16:30 PM 06.02.07
(W0219)
Bruce Noll.
The Value of Optical Microscopy.

16:30 - 16:50 PM 06.02.08
(W0068)
Gary Zuber.
FT-IR Microscopy of Single Crystals From X-Ray Diffraction Studies.
et al: Priscilla Offen, Curtis Haltiwanger, Drake Eggleston.

16:50 - 17:10 PM 06.02.09
(W0114)
David Tiede.
Measurement of Structure and Structural Change in Non- crystalline States Using Neutron and X-ray Scattering.
et al: Ruitian Zhang, Palma Ann Marone, Sonke Seifert, P. Thiyagarajan.

17:10 - 17:30 PM 06.02.10
(W0215)
Charles Campana.
Investigation of Problem Structures with CCD Detectors.
et al: Fook Tham, Ludger Haeming, Michael Ruf.


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Last updated: Tue May 18 14:58:44 EDT 1999


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