In order to do XRD, you need to (i) go to radiation safety training (information here) and (ii) arrange for machine-specific training.
Scheduling of the XRD equipment in Gilbert Hall is via this online scheduler at this page (as of 2013-05-01): http://www.science.oregonstate.edu/~kykynesr/
There are a few XRD systems that we use on a regular basis.
Bruker D8 Discover - Dearborn 201- Mostly used for thin films, although you can also put powders in it. Can be used to do phi scans, chi scans, rocking curve measurements, xrr, etc (these require special training because you have to use the scintillator, which isn't normally installed). Be sure to use the “snout” on the x-ray source, otherwise you end up with a broad background radiation signal.
Rigaku Ultima IV multipurpose X-ray diffraction system - Gilbert 020 - also XRR
Rigaku Miniflex Xray Diffractometer - Gilbert room # - Useful mostly for powders. The x-ray beam is too weak for much thin film work, though it may be usable if you have strong peaks (e.g. from epitaxial films).
Rigaku RAPID Diffractometer - Gilbert 020- This machine is particularly nice for doing theta/2theta thin film scans because it collects data over a wide range at once, so you can get lots of counts in a short time frame.
There is a good set of tutorials at MIT:
This is useful when you have an oriented film. Say you have an 001 film and you want to figure out a and b, for example. You could do that by looking at the h0l and 0kl peaks by tilting the sample. On the Bruker system, this would be a rotation in chi. To figure out what you should set the angle to, see Cullity Appendix 1 (A1-3 has interplanar angles).
If you happen to have Mathematica handy, you can use the following notebooks (instructions included) to calculate the angles quickly:
Lattice parameters can be accurately determined using a Nelson-Riley fit of your x-ray data (c vs cos2θ/sinθ, find the y intercept). You need very good data to get a reasonable parameter.
If your film is strongly oriented, you can get the other parameters by rotating in χ. E.g. if you have a (001) film, you can get a and b by looking at (h0l) and (0kl) peaks. These lattice parameters will be determined less accurately - the signal is small and any error in c will propagate into a and b.
Can get thin film thickness by modelling fringes (XRay refractive index very close to 1, so no problems with knowing index as in optical measurements). Critical angle for Total External Reflection gives density of film (XRay refractive index in a material is slightly less than 1, so the familiar optical “TIR” becomes external refleciton). Surface roughness can be measured. Some modelling required.