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PyXRD is a python implementation of the matrix algorithm for computer modeling
of X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns of disordered lamellar structures.
It's goals are to:
provide an easy user-interface for end-users
provide basic tools for displaying and manipulating XRD patterns
produce high-quality (publication-grade) figures
make modelling of XRD patterns for mixed-layer clay minerals 'easy'
be free and open-source (open box instead of closed box model)
PyXRD was written with the multi-specimen full-profile fitting method in mind.
A direct result is the ability to 'share' parameters among similar phases.
This allows for instance to have an air-dry and a glycolated illite-smectite
share their coherent scattering domain size, but still have different basal
spacings and interlayer compositions for the smectite component. Or play with
the di/tri-octahedral composition of a chlorite with ease.
Other features are (incomplete list):
Import/export several common XRD formats (.RD, .RAW, .CPI, ASCII)
Simple background subtraction/addition (linear or custom patterns)
Smoothing patterns and adding noise to patterns
Peak finding and annotating (markers)
Peak stripping and peak area calculation tools
Custom line colors, line widths, pattern positions, ...
Automatic parameter refinement using several algorithms, e.g.:
L BFGS B
Brute Force
Covariation Matrix Adapation Evolutionary Strategy (CMA-ES; using DEAP 1.0)
Multiple Particle Swarm Optimization (MPSO; using DEAP 1.0)
Particle-swarm CMA-ES (PS-CMA-ES; using DEAP 1.0)
Scripting support
DISCLAIMER
PyXRD is still very much work in progress. Currently there is no strict
development cycle as it is still a one-man project. This also means little
time is going into testing and adding new tests for new features. Most of the
codebase therefore remains untested at this point and Things May Break as a
result.
As of version 0.5.0 PyXRD (finally) supports standard python packaging, meaning
it is available from the Python package index
and has become very easy to install for most Python users once the dependencies
are installed.
If you're not used to (installing) Python software, see below for specific
instructions.
Dependencies
This is what should be present on your system.
Python 3.4 or later
Setuptools
GTK3 and pygobject 3.2 or later
cairocffi
Numpy 1.11 or later
Scipy 1.1 or later
Matplotlib 2.2 or later
Pyro4 4.41 or later
DEAP 1.0 or later
Additionally, to be able to run the unit tests, you'll need to install
pyton-mock (>= 1.3.0). To just run PyXRD, you won't need it though.
Windows
PyXRD is developed on Ubuntu Linux, and thus has a number of dependencies which
are not native to windows. Because of the difficulties in installing these
correctly, from version 0.8 onwards an all-in-one stand alone installer is
provided for windows users. Previous installations should not interfere, but
it's better to remove them (including python, numpy, scipy and
pygtk installed along with pre-v0.8 versions).
You can choose for a local installation or a portable (single-folder)
installation. The latter is just a zip-file which can be extracted e.g. onto an
usb-drive. The downside is you don't get start menu entries.