vesicle
This model provides the form factor, P(q), for an unilamellar vesicle. This is model is effectively identical to the hollow sphere reparameterized to be more intuitive for a vesicle and normalizing the form factor by the volume of the shell.
Parameter | Description | Units | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
scale | Source intensity | None | 1 |
background | Source background | cm-1 | 0.001 |
sld | vesicle shell scattering length density | 10-6Å-2 | 0.5 |
sld_solvent | solvent scattering length density | 10-6Å-2 | 6.36 |
volfraction | volume fraction of shell | None | 0.05 |
radius | vesicle core radius | Å | 100 |
thickness | vesicle shell thickness | Å | 30 |
The returned value is scaled to units of cm-1 sr-1, absolute scale.
Definition
The 1D scattering intensity is calculated in the following way (Guinier, 1955)
where \(\phi\) is the volume fraction of shell material, \(V_{shell}\) is the volume of the shell, \(V_{\text{cor}}\) is the volume of the core, \(V_{\text{tot}}\) is the total volume, \(R_{\text{core}}\) is the radius of the core, \(R_{\text{tot}}\) is the outer radius of the shell, \(\rho_{\text{solvent}}\) is the scattering length density of the solvent (which is the same as for the core in this case), \(\rho_{\text{scale}}\) is the scattering length density of the shell, background is a flat background level (due for example to incoherent scattering in the case of neutrons), and \(j_1\) is the spherical bessel function \(j_1 = (\sin(x) - x \cos(x))/ x^2\).
The functional form is identical to a “typical” core-shell structure, except that the scattering is normalized by the volume that is contributing to the scattering, namely the volume of the shell alone, the scattering length density of the core is fixed the same as that of the solvent, the scale factor when the data are on an absolute scale is equivalent to the volume fraction of material in the shell rather than the entire core+shell sphere, and the parameterization is done in terms of the core radius = \(R_{\text{core}}\) and the shell thickness = \(R_{\text{tot}} - R_{\text{core}}\).
The 2D scattering intensity is the same as P(q) above, regardless of the orientation of the q vector which is defined as
NB: The outer most radius (= radius + thickness) is used as the effective radius for S(Q) when P(Q) * S(Q) is applied.
References
A Guinier and G. Fournet, Small-Angle Scattering of X-Rays, John Wiley and Sons, New York, (1955)
Author: NIST IGOR/DANSE on: pre 2010
Last Modified by: Paul Butler on: March 20, 2016
Last Reviewed by: Paul Butler on: March 20, 2016