Date: Mon, 11 May 1998 21:07:37 +0200 To: rietveld_l@ill.fr From: "Manuel J. Roman Alpiste"Subject: A bit problem with GSAS Reply-To: RIETVELD_L Distribution List Hi, all: I'm too new using GSAS (I think is a very good program), but I have some problems by introducing some parameters in the program... I've got a copper complex to analize, and i'd like to instruce some atom positions (coordinates) to refine. But I've got a lot of atoms (60 C for example), and i'd like to introduce the initials coordinates from a text file. I konw this is possible, but i don't know how to do... Anyone can help me? I think is an stupid question, but as i said, i'm so new in that. Thanks a lot. Alpiste ----------------------------------- Manuel J. Roman Alpiste Depto. Mineralogia y Petrologia Facultad de Ciencias (Universidad de Granada) Avda. Fuentenueva, S/N 18002 Granada (Spain) e-mail: mjroman@goliat.ugr.es URL: http://www.ugr.es/~jdmartin --------------------------------------
From: "Peter Y. Zavalij"To: "RIETVELD_L Distribution List" Subject: Re: A bit problem with GSAS Date: Tue, 12 May 1998 10:04:41 -0400 Hi, it is not problem to introduce atomic coordinates in GSAS but first you have to convert them using any spreadsheet like Excel into following format: i n V .00000 .02528 .50000 1 V i .02791 i n O .00000 .11577 .72600 1 O1 i .01891 i n O .10143 .17495 .04042 1 O2 i .01493 i n O .09283 .18137 .36516 1 O3 i .02654 i n C .13218 .22760 .20938 1 C1 i .01772 i n C .29687 .10022 .70034 1 C2 i .05151 Where 1st and 2nd columns are GSAS input command, 3rd atom type, next 3 are xyz, then occupation, atom name, the following "i" stands for isotropic and last column Uiso. All positions have to be separated be space(s). Next step is simple: copy this table and paste it into GSAS window where the atomic editor is active. Dr. Peter Y. Zavalij University Crystallographer Materials Research Center, SUNY at Binghamton Ph/Fax:(607)777-4623 E-mail:zavalij@binghamton.edu http://imr.chem.binghamton.edu/zavalij/zavalij.html