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Home > About the Academy > Biographical memoirs
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
Edward Norman Maslen 1935-1997
By S.R. Hall and A.McL. Mathieson
This memoir was originally published in Historical Records
of Australian Science, vol.13, no.3, 2001.
Numbers in brackets refer to the bibliography at the end of the text.
Numbers in square brackets refer to the references also at the end of the text.
Ted Maslen's premature death on 2 February 1997,
during a long distance run, shocked his many friends and colleagues
around the world. A man of great energy and diverse talents, he made
substantial contributions to the community and to sport as well as to
Australian science.
Introduction
Prior to the Second World War, only a few
scientists in Australia were involved in atomic structure studies
using X-ray diffraction techniques. These were J. Shearer in the
Physics Department of the University of Western Australia, D.P.
Mellor in the Chemistry Department of the University of Sydney and,
to a limited extent, J.S. Anderson in the Chemistry Department of
the University of Melbourne. At the University of Adelaide, in the
Physics Department, there were studies of electron scattering by R.S. Burdon.
During the War, the countries that normally
supplied scientific equipment and materials to Australia were fully
occupied with the provision of war needs. So, by necessity,
Australian scientists had to devise means of production and that
without delay. Thus, for example, an optical glass industry was
created, optical devices manufactured, radar equipment constructed,
and so on, as detailed in Mellor's volume of 'Australia in the War of
1939-1945' [1].
With the end of the War, the sense of confidence
in the capability of science to solve problems and to contribute to
post-war development encouraged the Federal government to support
scientific research. One result was an effort to introduce advanced
techniques by attracting scientists from overseas to contribute their
knowledge and by arranging that young scientists in Australia proceed
overseas to learn and then return to develop their new skills. As a
result, nuclei of X-ray crystallography groups were created in
Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide and Perth.
In Perth specifically, C.J. Birkett Clews was
appointed to the Chair of Physics of the University of Western
Australia, having studied structure analysis by single-crystal X-ray
diffraction at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge. He initiated a
number of students into the subject, one of whom was E.N. Maslen.
After graduating BSc (Hons) in Physics in 1956, Maslen went to Oxford
as a Rhodes Scholar.
In Oxford, he worked with Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin
(Nobel Prize, Chemistry, 1964). His work there was mainly on the
X-ray structure determination of certain antibiotic compounds but
even in this biochemical area he gave evidence of an interest in the
more physical aspects of crystallography. In 1960, he was awarded his
DPhil. On his return to the University of Western Australia as a
lecturer in the Physics Department, he proceeded to lay the
foundations for what was to become a major school of crystallography,
thus becoming a key figure in the development of this subject in
Australia. He was a pioneer and later an established figure in the
investigation of chemical bonding by precision studies of the
electron density distribution in crystals. He contributed to many
theoretical and experimental aspects of X-ray diffraction and
explored basic questions in quantum chemistry. Latterly he utilized
the great potential of synchrotron X-radiation in his studies. He was
responsible for the formation of the Crystallography Centre at the
University of Western Australia in 1972 and was its director until
1993 when he became head of the Physics Department.
As a recognized authority in the precision
electron-density study of crystals, Ted was prominent in presenting
the work of his group at international meetings. As a result, he
became a important figure in the activities of the International
Union of Crystallography (IUCr). In 1995, he was elected a Fellow of
the Australian Academy of Science (AAS).
Background
Edward Norman Maslen was born at Kalgoorlie on 8
August 1935. His parents were William Michael Maslen, born on 1
October 1907 at Greenbushes, WA and Nellie Victoria Maslen
(née Detez) born on 27 March 1905 at Merredin, WA. His father
joined the Accounts Branch of the State Public Service in 1924 and,
following correspondence courses in accountancy and part-time studies
in English and Economics at the University of Western Australia, was
attached to the Public Works Water Supply Department as an
accountant. It is of interest to note that, at this time, he took up
rowing with the Swan River Rowing Club. Because of changes associated
with the Depression of 1929, he was transferred to Kalgoorlie. He
completed his accountancy studies in 1933 and secured qualification
with the Commonwealth Institute of Accountants with top marks for the
State in Mercantile Law and Taxation. In 1934, he was admitted to the
Chartered Institute of Secretaries with the second-highest marks in
Australasia. In 1940, he became Officer-in-Charge of the Water Supply
Department in Geraldton where Ted's schooling began at Saint
Patrick's College (formerly Christian Brothers' College). His mother
used to say that, even as a youngster, Ted always got into things and
you didn't know what he would be up to next, indicative of his
inquiring mind and superabundant energy. Ted was the second child and
had an older brother, Victor, and a sister, Sue. All three became
physicists, graduates of the University of Western Australia. In
1951, Ted won a General Exhibition and, in 1952, went to the
University of Western Australia and St George's College to do a
science degree. He was an outstanding student, gaining the Geology
Prize in his first year and a Hackett Scholarship for 1955. He also
became involved in student affairs, being elected in 1955 as
President of the Guild of Undergraduates. 1956 was a momentous year
for Ted. Apart from his role as President, he was very active in a
student appeal to raise funds for a medical school within the
University. For the latter, while competing in an athletic meeting,
he inadvertently spiked himself and as a result contracted tetanus
which was then a serious and often fatal disease. This was front-page
news for several days and, even now, many people identify him as 'the
student for whom traffic was diverted to keep his Royal Perth
Hospital ward quiet'. This episode provided a very positive spin-off.
The publicity was largely responsible for ensuring a generous
subscription to the medical school fund and there is a photograph of
a young, beaming Ted Maslen sitting up in a hospital bed handing over
a cheque for £10,000 to the fund raisers. While
all this was going on, Ted was a candidate for a Rhodes Scholarship,
the announcement of which was withheld until he recovered. He was
awarded the scholarship in 1956 and went to Oxford University at St
John's College for the next three years. He completed his DPhil.
studying molecular structure by X-ray diffraction techniques under
the supervision of Dr Hodgkin. This was an inspirational period for
Ted and was a dominant factor in his life-long interest in
crystallography.
At Oxford, he met Sheila Robinson. Sheila's
parents were Cyrus William Robinson, born on 29 October 1903, and
Nora Teresa Robinson, born on 3 July 1905, both of Sunderland,
England. Sheila and Ted were married in 1960, just before Ted took up
a lectureship in the Physics Department of the University of Western
Australia. They had three sons, Patrick, Daniel and Mark and five
daughters, Barbara, Rebecca, Nicola, Catherine and Frances. The
youngest of the boys, Mark, is following in his father's footsteps,
having graduated from the University of Western Australia with First
Class Honours in Physics. Several of the children, Patrick, Barbara
and Nicola have followed Ted's interest and have degrees in Physical
Education. Rebecca has degrees in Law and Commerce, Frances is an
accountant, Catherine a physiotherapist and Daniel is studying
viticulture.
This record of Ted's formative years reveals the
personal characteristics of energy, enthusiasm, determination and
personal involvement that in adult life were to manifest themselves
in his dedication to his scientific research, his concern for his
family, his students and, in the wider context, the University and
the community.
Scientific contribution
During his forty years as a scientist, Ted
Maslen contributed to almost every facet of crystallographic
research. His main interest came to be precision electron density
studies, but he was prepared to embark enthusiastically on allied
projects ranging from the purely theoretical such as the solution of
quantum mechanical systems, to the totally practical such as the
design of collimators and diffraction instruments. Above all he was a
determined individualist, confident enough in his abilities to 'go it
alone' in a new field if expertise was not close at hand.
Structure elucidation
X-rays are scattered by electrons and the periodic
scattering from atoms in crystals leads to interference, that is,
diffraction. The electron density distribution of a crystal can be
determined from measured X-ray diffraction intensities, provided the
relative phase of each diffraction vector is derivable from other considerations. The determined
distribution corresponds to the time-averaged integrated electron
density of the atoms in the crystal and includes features due to
bonding and vibrational modes. This approach leads to an atomic
structure of the molecule or ionic entity in terms of a
three-dimensional electron density distribution, thus defining its
geometric parameters. Neutron diffraction provides similar structural
information but in terms of atomic nuclei, so that a combination of
X-ray and neutron diffraction can be useful and instructive.
Maslen's initial X-ray diffraction experience was
the structural study of a pyrimidine (1), as part of his
Physics honours thesis at the University of Western Australia. His
doctorate from Oxford was for work on X-ray structure analyses of
larger molecules of natural origin, the important antibiotics,
cephalosporin C (2) and phenoxymethylpenicillin (3). Analysis of the
latter allowed exploration of how sharpened Fourier coefficients
improved structure determination (45).
On return to the University of Western Australia,
Maslen followed two structural lines: one derived from his experience
at Oxford on natural product molecules, while the other, associated
with the structural properties of molecules with charged groups,
zwitterions, focused mainly on aromatic molecules with amino and
sulphonic acid groups. In addition, as appropriate to a physics
department, his interest was in more general diffraction matters,
particularly in measurement procedures that could improve the
precision of structural studies. In time, this theme assumed
dominance.
In respect of natural products, this was a period
when X-ray diffraction became an important physical procedure capable
of revealing the total structure of these relatively complex organic
molecules, including their absolute configuration and details of
conformation. By comparison with the more conventional methods of
organic chemical analysis and synthesis, the diffraction approach
provided unambiguous information about molecular structure, even
though, at that time, it was a slow process because each diffraction
intensity on film needed to be estimated by eye and the electron
densities had to be calculated manually or with very slow computers.
An additional obstacle was that suitable heavy-atom derivatives of
the target compounds were required to assist in the phasing process,
and these had to form suitable crystals. Nevertheless, organic
chemists keenly sought the results of these analyses and Maslen
determined the structures of a number of derivatives of natural
products (5-10) using heavy atom and anomalous dispersion
techniques. For methyl melaleucate iodoacetate (7, 7a), the anomalous
scattering of CuKa radiation by an iodine atom was utilised to
establish the phase angles of many reflections. This led to an
estimation of the imaginary component, Df, of the scattering factor
for iodine (48).
Maslen determined other natural product structures
(11, 12) using the so-called 'direct methods' phasing procedures
based on the statistical structure-invariant relationships of Jerome
Karle and Herbert Hauptman (Nobel Prize, Chemistry, 1985) which did
not require a 'heavy' atom. In the second case, the normalized
structure factors were not distributed evenly through diffraction
space due to high anisotropic atomic displacement parameters
and Maslen established a correction (18) (see 49,50) that led to an
improvement in the modelling of the distribution, and hence to the
solution of the structure by 'direct methods'.
Maslen's work on amino-benzene-sulphonic acids and
amides (13-17) was aimed at studying the interaction between
substituent groups attached to a benzene ring and a comparison of
their hydrogen-bonding. In the case of ß-sulphanilamide
(16), three-dimensional X-ray film data (a major measurement effort
at that time) were used in conjunction with two-dimensional counter
neutron diffraction data. Since the neutron data referred to nuclei,
this provided improved information about bond length variations in
the disubstituted benzene and in the related charged and neutral
groups. His X-ray study of orthanilic acid revealed peaks of electron
density above and below the plane of the benzene ring adjacent to the
C C bonds, indicative of p bonding contributions. This, and
several other studies, highlighted for Maslen the opportunities for
acquiring detailed information on chemical bonding from diffraction
measurements.
During the 1960s he did other structural
studies (19-25) to resolve specific chemical problems. However,
as structure solution methodologies were better established, Maslen's focus shifted more to determining the fine detail of
electron density distributions around and between atoms. With the
creation of the Crystallography Centre at the University of Western
Australia in 1972, structure analysis came under the general
supervision of Dr A.H. White of the Chemistry Department. Even so,
Maslen's interest in this aspect of crystallography continued
throughout the 1970s, as is indicated in (26-43).
Electron density and bonding
Maslen's precision electron density
studies, and particularly his use of the promolecule
concept, were his most important and prolific contributions to
crystallography. He became a recognised expert and respected
authority in this field, though, not infrequently, his
research directions and findings were somewhat controversial. As in
most of his endeavours, Ted was a confident individualist who was
undeterred by the consensus view or from offering unconventional
interpretations, and this occasionally led to interesting editorial
exchanges when the work was submitted for publication. His advice to
colleagues on these occasions was 'one must always be prepared to
educate referees'.
The electron density associated with bonding
between atoms relates only to the outer electrons of the individual
atoms, and therefore constitutes only a minor component of the total
electron density distribution determined from a diffraction study. It
is best observed by calculating the electron density difference
distribution (or map), Dr = rexp rcalc between the experimental electron density, rexp, derived
from the X-ray diffraction data, and the corresponding distribution,
rcalc, calculated from the co-ordinates and scattering
capabilities of the non-bonded spherical atoms in the structural
model as modified by their vibrational characteristics. Because these
differences are usually small, the choice of modelling parameters
that influence rcalc is a highly critical step.
Maslen's initial studies were on the bonding
densities between carbon atoms. He recognised the importance of
appropriate X-ray scattering curves in the resolution of Dr and
applied the only theoretical curves available at the time, namely
that by McWeeny [2] concerning bonded carbon. His examination
(75) of the theoretical values of McWeeny in relation to graphite
showed that, within the aromatic plane of the molecule, there is
little deviation from isotropy. Prior to this treatment, the
imaginary contribution to the scattering factor had been largely
ignored and so he undertook to derive this for carbon in the case of
diamond and graphite. These results showed the relation of this
component to the antisymmetric distribution arising from s bonding in
the case of diamond and the build-up between the carbon atoms, a
result similar to that demonstrated by Dawson [3].
To determine the extent to which
conventionally-measured diffraction data contained evidence of
bonding, Maslen carried out a literature survey of electron density
distributions (77). He observed that, for trigonally-bonded carbon,
the aromatic C-C bonds contain a residual central peak of
maximum ~0.2eA-3 with half height extensions about
0.3A in and 0.75A perpendicular to the trigonal plane. The most
critical conclusion from this study was that the use of least squares
to refine the structural model as isolated spherical atoms could
obscure the detail of electron density variations associated with
bonding.
This latter realization focused his attention on
the possible use of aspherical scattering factors in the multipole
refinement approach of Stewart [4], which he first applied
to 1,3,5-triacetylbenzene (78). In an extensive survey
(79) of multipole applications he concluded that the use of
bond-directed scattering factors (78) was preferable and this led to
five studies using this approach (80-84). The first was a
neutron diffraction study of powdered diamond, the second a
re-analysis of the available X-ray data on diamond, while the third
investigated different electron density models for silicon using
existing highly-accurate absolute measurements. The fourth paper, on
s-triazine, was a more complex study while, in the final paper, he
examined melamine using nuclear-centred multipole density functions
in which the radial exponents were varied.
In an invited review of advances in precision
density studies (85), Maslen summarized the field at the time. He
pointed out that 'it now appears possible to observe directly the
effects of forces on the density, which previously were merely
inferred. As a consequence, charge density analyses are being used to
improve our understanding of a wide range of physical and chemical
concepts and phenomena, such as the degree of ionicity and the
strength of covalent forces in chemical bonding, the nature of
metal-metal bonds, hydrogen bonding, photochemical reactions,
superconductivity transitions and Jahn-Teller distortions.'
His review also foreshadowed a change in interest
from the lighter elements and mono-atomic crystals to compounds
containing heavier metals and longer-range interactions. This was at
a time when heavy-atom structures were generally considered as
unsuitable for precision analysis. In the study of several
transition metal complexes (86, 87) he gave close attention to the
region adjacent to the metal atom. In the redetermination (88) of the
classical structure, copper sulphate pentahydrate, dominant
density differences near two crystallographically-independent Cu
atoms were related to the re-distribution of the Cu 3d electrons
associated with bonding. He claimed that the polarized density
resulted from second-nearest-neighbour interactions and that these
were significant and important to bonding.
From this point on, Maslen showed a preference for
studying families of compounds in which the structure remained
unchanged except for the central metal atom. This enabled
modifications in Dr distributions to be interpreted in terms of
changes in the orbital distribution of the central metal atoms. In
the study of Tutton's salts,
(NH4)2M(SO4)2.-6(H2O)6, an isomorphous series with a divalent
metal, M = Mg, Ni, Zn or Cu (95-99) by X-ray and neutron
diffraction methods, Maslen observed that the Dr distributions
near the metal atoms were similar except for differences arising from
the d-electrons. An extensive examination followed of the
nona-aqualanthanoid(III) tris(trifluoromethanesulphonates),
[Ln(H2O)9](CF3SO
3)3 complexes with Ln = La through to Lu, which form
an isomorphous series of hexagonal structures (100, 101), and these presented an intriguing series of closely-related electron
density maps.
Maslen's earlier density studies had involved
predominantly 'neutral' atoms. This was because the partitioning of
the electron density distribution is more difficult when
atomic charges are involved and the Hirshfeld partitioning approach
preferred by Maslen had to be applied judiciously. For example, the
charges he determined for a series of transition metal perovskites,
KMF3, M = Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, and Zn (102-105) changed
monotonically through the series but the polarization near Zn is
significantly aspherical and the Zn, K and F atomic charges were
+0.18, +0.47 and 0.21e, respectively. That is, the
determined polarity is consistent with conventional charges, but the
magnitudes are less than the formal values (see also 121).
A study of the copper perovskite KCuF3
(105) by Maslen guided the analysis of the
more-difficult-to-crystallize superconducting compound
YBa2Cu3O7-x (106) in relation
to determining a position-space model for the superconducting
behaviour. It is evident from this and later studies (for example
126, 128, 133) that his views had moved away from the conventional
wisdom of anion-anion interactions dominating the distribution of the
electron density, to holding that the cation-cation interactions
were more significant.
At about this juncture, Maslen's group became more
concerned with the effect of extinction on their measurements of
intensity. Extinction is an important universal effect in the
measurement of intensities from even small single crystals and is due
to multiple interference within the crystal. Correction for this
effect is generally based on theoretical mathematical models derived
originally by Darwin [5] and elaborated by
Zachariasen [6] and others, which Maslen had used in his
earlier Dr studies. However, in a careful analysis of data in relation
to a-Al2O3 (67), Maslen revealed that the
param
eters derived from this procedure were physically
unrealistic, the corrections being rather sensitive to the weighting
of the observations of the intense low-angle reflections. He
devised an alternative procedure for the assessment of
extinction, more closely allied to experiment. In this, corrections
for extinction are evaluated in respect of equivalent reflections
with different path lengths through the crystal (68, also
71-73). (Such 'corrected' intensities for equivalent reflections
should, in principle, be equal.) Corrections by this procedure tended
to be smaller than those based on minimizing the difference between
Fobs and Fcalc. The reliability of this
procedure is, however, dependent on knowing the crystal shape
accurately, the crystal being asymmetric, and on precisely measured
intensities for symmetry-equivalent diffraction data (that is, the
method is optimal for high-symmetry space groups).
From this time on, Maslen placed increasing
reliance on the use of synchrotron radiation at the Photon Factory at
Tsukuba in Japan, especially using off-focus beams to ensure better
beam uniformity. The much greater beam intensity and monochromaticity
greatly improved the signal/noise ratio of the measurements and this
was important because he and his colleagues were early users of
'microcrystals' (that is, crystals less than 1000 microns3
in volume) to minimize extinction effects. This reduced the effect of
random errors in the measurements and substantially enhanced
definition of the density distributions. These improvements in
precision provided the basis for an investigation of optical,
electrostatic and magnetic properties attributable to aspherical
electron density. Maslen's study of rhombohedral carbonates with Ca,
Mg, and Mn (115-120) showed a correlation of the Dr distributions
with physical properties of optical anisotropy. Lattice mode
frequencies predicted from eigenvalues of the T and L tensors for the
CO3 rigid group motion in these structures were close to
spectroscopic values. The Dr topography near the CO3 groups
showed the influence of the cations and correlated strongly with the
refractive indices.
Maslen's interest in heavy-atom bonding extended
across much of the periodic table, and included the rare-earth
elements. Typical synchrotron studies were the rare earth oxides
(139, 140) and the perovskite-type orthoferrites (133-5) in
which strong magnetic interactions between heavy-metal atoms
gave rise to pronounced bonding effects that were readily studied by
r methods.
Maslen's use of the modelling factors that
determined electron density distributions evolved considerably over
his career. However, underpinning much of these efforts was the
consistent application of the Hirshfield approach to partitioning
electron density in relation to the individual atoms. The reasons for
this are discussed in the next section. Definitive articles on X-ray
scattering (64) and X-ray absorption (65) were contributed by Maslen
to the International Tables for Crystallography.
The promolecule
The choice of the non-interacting spherical
ground-state atomic model for the calculation of rcalc is
critical to the interpretation of the measured electron
density distribution, and is referred to as the 'promolecule'
or independent atom model (IAM). The method of partitioning the
electron density distribution, so as to allocate the proper
charge component to the individual atom, has an important
bearing on the efficacy of this approach in the study of
chemical bonding.
Maslen carefully scrutinized the two available
schemes for partioning, those of Bader and of Hirshfeld, using
theoretical wavefunctions for forty heteronuclear diatomic molecules
(141). The atomic charges derived by these procedures were compared
closely with electronegativity differences and with dipole moments.
The Hirshfeld procedure, in which component electron distributions
are overlapping and continuous, was preferred and applied thereafter
by Maslen and his colleagues in estimating atomic charges from X-ray
diffraction data.
He illustrated the importance of the promolecule
approach in determining chemical properties from electron densities
with the study of atomic radii, atomic charges derived from
partitioning and electrostatic energies (142). These results were
compared with the corresponding quantities from theoretical and
experimental studies of a large number of diatomic molecules. He
pointed out that the promolecule intrinsically contains useful
chemical information, the effect of which on the Dr distribution is
sometimes mistakenly attributed to chemical bonding.
Subsequently, Maslen showed that the
differences between experimental and accurate Hartree-Fock binding
energies are strongly correlated with the classical
electrostatic interaction between spherical atoms for
a large number of diatomic and polyatomic molecules (143). These
results led to an estimate for the molecular extra correlation
energy. He extended this approach (144) to test the IAM model with
calculations of cohesive energies that compared favourably with the
Madelung energies for a wide range of solids. IAM energies provide
better estimates for the alkali halide lattices than do the Madelung
energies.
In respect of atom size and charge in the alkali
halides LiF, NaF and LiCl (145), Maslen claimed that the lowering of
the potential energy, due to overlap of atomic electron densities, is
an accurate approximation to the bonding energy.
Maslen also applied the IAM approach to the
3d transition metals (146), a class of solids the cohesive energy of
which is not approximated by the classical electrostatic overlap
energy due to the near-degenerate nature of the ground states. He
showed that if the 3d metals were regarded as being in prepared
states prior to bonding, the bonded electrostatic energies are better
approximations to the observed binding energies.
Maslen's study of diatomic molecules led to a
re-appraisal (147) of Berlin's theorem [7]. It had been
observed experimentally that the central build-up of difference
electron density typical of carbon-carbon bonds did not occur in the
case of bonds NO, OO, ClCl, and so on. Berlin's
theorem underpinned the common assumption that an increase in the
electron density at the mid-point of a covalent bond is essential to
the stability of the bonded nuclei. While Berlin's theorem focused on
the total electron density, which must be positive everywhere, the
difference between the experimental density and the spherical model
density may be positive or negative. In studies of theoretical
electron densities for N2 and F2, Maslen
observed that the only substantial contribution to the overall
binding appeared to come from regions along the internuclear axis and
close to the nuclei. According to this interpretation, the build-up
of density near the mid-point of the bond plays almost no role in
binding the nuclei and is not a necessary condition for binding.
Somewhat later, in his final publications in this
area (148-152), Maslen stated that it was physically reasonable
to subdivide the total electron density of the promolecule in
proportion to each atom's contribution to the electrostatic
potential. He assessed atomic charges as the differences between
atomic numbers and the integrals of partitioned electron densities.
Promolecular charges evaluated for 160 lattice-compounds indicated
that cations acquire control over the electron distribution at the
expense of the anions. He attempted to show a consistent relationship
between the ground state electron configurations and the atomic radii
in which the invariant component of the radius associated with the
atomic cores can be equated with the value at which the integral of
the density equals the number of the core electrons. The tests made
on diatomic molecules were promising and would presumably have been
pursued further had it not been for Maslen's untimely death.
Theoretical chemistry
During the 1980s, part of Maslen's research
activity, and that of his students, was directed towards the
application of the emerging symbolic computing methodologies. His use
of algebraic packages, such as Mathematica and REDUCE,
to tackle quite daunting quantum mechanical problems, was a tribute
to his remarkable scientific versatility.
Maslen's papers (153-157) marked the first
phase of a very determined attempt to find an exact closed-form
expression for at least the ground-state wave function of helium.
Though not successful in this, his work did lead to the discovery of
a closed form for a second-order term in the expansion of that wave
function, that had eluded previous attempts by others over a long
period. Maslen's introductory paper opened by challenging the
pessimistic view of the possibility of finding exact solutions for
three and four-body systems and series methods were applied in
conjunction with a spherical polar co-ordinate system to the problem.
However, simple exact expressions could only be obtained for early
members of the series: even if this hurdle could be overcome, there
still remained an infinite number of arbitrary coefficients to be
determined. Maslen showed that this number could be reduced
dramatically by taking account of the expected asymptotic behaviour
of the wave function. The summary paper reflected on the question
'can an exact solution be obtained' and it concluded that this could
be done if, in some representation, only a finite number of the
arbitrary coefficients were non-zero. This set of papers greatly
clarified the problems involved in seeking an exact wave function for
helium.
Maslen followed with five exploratory
papers (158-162) which, in addition to other useful
results, threw light on the mathematical form of the exact wave
function for helium and studied the relative merits of several sets
of co-ordinates.
His next three papers (163-165) represent a
second attempt to obtain the exact wave function for helium and great
use is made of computer algebra to handle the heavy mathematical
calculations. The first of these papers included an echo of his
earlier comment in stating that the outlook for simple closed-form
helium wavefunctions is more favourable than is generally believed.
In (164), use is made of spherical polar co-ordinates to achieve full
reduction of the second-order term to a closed form. However it was
clear that the task of extending this achievement to higher-order
terms would be immense. Paper (166) presents some useful reduction
formulae for generalized hypergeometric functions of one variable
while (167) derives a compact analytical formula for two-electron
two-centre integrals over Slater functions. This work of Maslen and
his co-workers has been recognized by Myers et al [8] as
'impressive both in its accomplishments and its innovative use of
symbolic algebra'.
Primary research goal
While much of Ted Maslen's research was directed
at understanding and resolving specific problems, a consistent
goal throughout his career was the development of a unified view of
chemical bonding. Probably the most succinct insights into what he
saw as his 'holy grail' are contained within an eight-page document
entitled A Unified View of Chemical Bonding, prepared in 1993
for internal circulation to his research students.
In this he states that to understand chemical
bonding, precise knowledge is needed of the properties of atoms
relevant to the interaction that brings them together. He
observed that the topographies of the
experimentally-determined aspherical densities are usually consistent
with the view that the valence electrons that overlap with the cores
of their neighbours are transferred by exchange repulsion to the
interatomic regions of low electrostatic potential. However, he also
stated his belief that regions remote from the atomic sites
would reveal density information important to understanding physical
and chemical phenomena. Thus from an initial concern with the density
distribution between individual atoms, a more diversified view
related to the distribution of cations is evident. Although his early
death prevented a full development of this approach, his indelible
legacy to the field of high-quality measurements and their perceptive
evaluation has undoubtedly contributed significantly to the ultimate
understanding of the chemical bond in terms of electron density
distributions.
Contributions to academia
On his return to Australia from Oxford in 1960,
Maslen began, with characteristic vigour, to activate the
crystallography group. Though he expected of his students no less
than he demanded of himself the highest possible academic
standards his genuine concern for their progress and welfare
meant that postgraduates were quickly attracted to his group. Over
the years he supervized more than forty MSc and PhD students.
At Oxford, Maslen had been one of the early crystallographers to
use electronic computers for structure determination. When he
returned to Perth there was only one computer in Australia, SILLIAC,
at the University of Sydney and Maslen made use of the facilities
provided at that machine by Dr H.C. Freeman's group of
crystallographers there. Although access to SILLIAC was a vast
improvement over the use of calculators, a cycle of computing could
still take the Perth group several weeks, and a local computer was
clearly desirable. Maslen successfully campaigned, with Dr R. Dingle
of the Physics Department and Dr J. Ross of the Psychology
Department, for the purchase of a computer, and in 1962 an IBM 1620
was installed. Throughout the 1960s, crystallographers were the major
users of the computing facility, both at the University of Western
Australia and at most other university computing centres around the
world. Maslen was a member of the University's Computer Coordinating
Committee for many years and encouraged the University to take an
important step in purchasing one of the world's first commercial
time-sharing digital computers, a DEC PDP6, which was delivered in
1966. An attempt to control a Hilger and Watts four-circle
diffractometer with the PDP6 was unsuccessful, but provided useful
training for some students in real-time computing and machine
control. Maslen soon recognised the potential of the minicomputer
and
microcomputer as cost-effective computing options for
crystallographers and physicists, and in the mid-1970s he argued
vigorously that mainframe computers were no longer economical for
universities.
During the period 1970-80, Maslen contributed
much to university administration. In 1970, he became Chair of the
University of Western Australia's Physical Sciences Research Grants
Sub-committee. The 1970 Cole Report to the University Senate
recommended that large-scale instrumentation be shared between
departments. The combined efforts of Maslen and A.H. White of the
Chemistry Department led to the establishment in 1972 of the
Crystallography Centre with Maslen as director and White as deputy
director. He held many other administrative posts, being an elected
member of Professorial Board 1972-78 and 1984-86, a member
of the University Research Committee 1973-78, of the Radiation
Safety Committee from 1974 (Chair from 1977), and a member of the St
George's College Council, 1978-87.
In addition, there were extra-curricular
commitments: as a member of the Cancer Council (Western Australia)
1971-81, of the Radiological Council (Western Australia)
1974-85, and of the CSIRO State Committee for Western Australia
1976-80. He was a member of the Western Australian Rhodes
Scholarship Selection Committee 1970-75 and was secretary from
1978. Indifferent to the conventional trappings of ceremony, Maslen
would arrive at the annual selection meeting, held at Government
House under the chairmanship of the Governor, on his battered bike
with his well-worn green case containing the papers and reports.
While he had no direct say in the choice of the Scholar, he was an
adept secretary, bringing an item of relevant information to the
committee's attention at the crucial moment.
With some reluctance, Maslen became Head of the
Physics Department in 1993. The department, like others in Australia,
faced problems with decreasing student numbers and reduced budgets.
Maslen played a leading role in developing biophysics courses
at the University and it is arguable whether, without his
leadership, this programme, which has grown from a handful of
second-year students in 1995 to representation at all levels, would
have happened at all.
The position of Physics Head in the mid-1990s
was not easy. Redundancies were necessary. Almost without exception,
however, his colleagues considered Maslen to be the right man at the
helm for the times. His dealings with university administrators were
not always so well received. In the first place, Maslen was very
direct or, as a senior colleague put it, 'for him diplomacy was just
another term for telling lies'. This is not to say that he was
intentionally rude or abrasive but he was scrupulously honest and
curried no favours, at any level. Ted was tenaciously outspoken and
even passionate, both in committee and in correspondence. On campus
and elsewhere, he was viewed as a valuable ally and a formidable
foe.
In a letter in which Maslen expressed his concerns
about current university decision-making, he wrote: 'Traditional
academic protocols are a distillation of the collective wisdom over
generations. Those protocols have never become tiresome restrictions
on brilliant minds, but, on occasions, have held in check the
mediocre and the hare-brained.'
Contributions to the profession
In 1974, Ted was Chairman of Topic 1, 'Real Atoms
in Crystals', of the International Conference on 'Real Atoms and Real
Crystals' that was sponsored by the International Union of
Crystallography (IUCr) and the Australian Academy of Science (AAS)
and held in Melbourne. He was Vice-President of the Society of
Crystallographers in Australia (SCA) 1978-79 and its President
1980-81. He was a member of the IUCr Commission on Charge, Spin
and Momentum Density 1975-81 and was elected to the IUCr
Executive in 1984. For the 1987 Triennial Congress, Perth was
selected as the conference venue and Ted appointed Chair of the
Organising Committee. In order to contain costs, the Crystallography
Centre eschewed professional support to deal with organizational
details. In the event, there was a significant profit, the SCA, which
underwrote the conference, being the beneficiary. This outcome arose
for two reasons: attendance was greater than had been
originally planned for, and the registration fees were in US dollars
and there was a fortuitous shift in exchange rates during the
conference. The resultant income is now used to help students attend
crystallographic conferences. In 1997, in recognition of Ted's
efforts in respect of the Congress, these funds were
called the 'E.N. (Ted) Maslen 1987 Studentships and Scholarships'.
Maslen's membership of the IUCr Executive ended in
1990 but, because he was a strong advocate of electronic publishing
for IUCr journals, he was appointed to the post of IUCr Director of
Archiving and Crystallographic Information 1990-1993. Prior to
that he had chaired a working party on crystallographic information
(1987-1990). This eventually resulted in the development of the
Crystallographic Information File [9] that was adopted by the
IUCr for data exchange and is now used widely in the structural
sciences for journals and databases. He later became the Chairman of
the IUCr Committee on Electronic Publishing, Dissemination and
Storage of Information 1993-96.
Maslen also made a foundational contribution to
the Australian Institute of Nuclear Science and Engineering (AINSE)
neutron-scattering group set up in the late 1950s as an interface
between the Atomic Energy Commission and the universities. He was one
of the first neutron scattering users at Lucas Heights and his group
established an excellent collaborative presence at that facility. In
the early years of the group, he would drive across the Nullarbor to
AINSE with a car-load of research students. The driving was shared so
that continuous progress could be made, and at change-over time the
fresh driver would be required to fill the tank before getting behind
the wheel. It then became a competition to see who could drive the
car furthest on a single tankful of petrol. These cross-country
expeditions on the then-unsurfaced Nullarbor 'highway' were part of
student folklore. On one occasion Maslen managed to obtain some cheap
accommodation for himself and his students in Sydney, only to find
that no-one could sleep because of the incessant foot traffic outside
their rooms in this particular Kings Cross Hotel. He complained to an
incredulous hotel management but was given a refund.
On the sporting field
For his whole life, Ted was an intensely keen and
competitive sportsman, especially in rowing and athletics. He is
often remembered for his sporting achievements as a student.
Although the University Athletic Club had been long established,
there were just six members when Ted joined in 1952.
With him, there were no half-measures. For the
next three summer vacations, he worked as a weighbridge clerk on the
wheat bins some hundreds of kilometres from Perth but did not miss a
Saturday afternoon competition at suburban Leederville Oval,
travelling the long distance on his motor cycle. He was elected
Captain of the Club in 1955. He also took up rowing at the University
of Western Australia, joining the university boat club in 1952 and
becoming club Captain in 1954.
At Oxford, he enthusiastically took to both
academic work and sporting endeavour. One morning, he and a friend
went by train to London, changed into running gear and ran non-stop
from Marble Arch back to St John's some sixty miles. His
rowing prowess was honed at Oxford. His Isis eight took the Head of
the River in 1957 and was the reserve crew for that year's annual
Oxford-Cambridge clash. He was successful also in double
sculling events. The trophy oars, suitably inscribed, hang proudly in
the Maslen home. Ted acquired an Oxford half-blue.
In Perth, to ensure time for exercise, he
carefully controlled how his time was allocated. As the family
increased, Sheila had greater need of the car and Ted started to ride
his bicycle to university. He rose at 5:30am, attended early morning
mass and made breakfast and lunch sandwiches for the family,
and then rode his bike some fifteen kilometres to the University
of Western Australia campus. At the university, his end-of-day regime
included an hour's run, often in the company of students and
other staff, and then home by bike.
In spite of a tendency for his
shoulder to dislocate, he liked to play cricket and
football. On one such occasion when playing football at
Oxford, his shoulder dislocated and he quietly asked a colleague in
the other team if he would mind pulling on the arm to get it back
into the socket. Ted played on but his colleague's concentration
never quite recovered and Ted's team won easily.
In Western Australia, Ted stroked the senior eight
from 1960 to 1970. University had not won a State eight's
championship in eight years, then in 1963 Ted stroked a novice crew
to victory. He subsequently rowed for Western Australia in the Kings
Cup. In 1964, having stroked the University eight, the coxless four
and the coxed four and been undefeated for the whole season, Ted was
named Oarsman of the Year.
He was President of the University Athletic Club
from 1960 to 1962. The club went on to become the State's most
successful, and he remained a member for forty-five years. He was the
ultimate 'club man'. He would run, walk, hurdle, jump, pole vault, to
help his team score points and to encourage others. Ted is most
fondly remembered for his Herculean efforts in the steeplechase. This
event was always run on the hottest part of the day and Ted was
always there without a hat, and barefoot on a scorching track
trying to win or get a place, but above all to run a personal
best time and score points for his club. He always gave 110% and
invariably finished in a state of exhaustion, from which he quickly
recovered to compete in the 5,000 metres a little later in the day,
again to finish in a state of exhaustion but pleased with a good
day's distance running.
In 1977 at the Australian Veterans' Championships
Ted raced against Albie Thomas, Olympian and former world record
holder for the mile. In a fast and hard-fought race Ted came to the
line a second in front of that great Olympian in 4 minutes 15 seconds
an Australian veteran record for the mile. That was the
highlight of his athletic career, he said. The Western
Australian State steeplechase records for the veteran classes, M35,
M40, M45, M50 and M60 were all held by Ted.
Service to the community
Ted gave outstanding service to the South Perth
City Council, serving as a councillor for thirteen years between 1976
and 1995 as an independent. He not only kept an eye on the big
planning picture but was conversant with detail at a local level to
ensure maintenance of lifestyles and quality of life. He was one of
the earliest to protest, on behalf of the inner Perth municipalities,
at the mounting traffic volumes being disgorged into the city each
day. He thus became an early advocate of ensuring that these traffic
volumes were kept off suburban streets not designed for the
high-density traffic, but directed to streets that
were.
He was an ideal councillor in at least one
important respect. In a State where party politics exists, but not
overtly, in local government, Ted was genuinely of an independent
mind and spirit. His personal politics remained his private affair.
He believed strongly that solutions to problems lay in better
information, planning and action. He often surprised authorities by
his knowledge in their area of expertise and, on detailed
investigation, he was more often than not successful with his
proposed solution. In such cases, he was always fair, always direct,
but uncompromising in getting at the truth.
Party politics aside, Ted in the local council did
not 'politic' in the personal or factional sense. Again, as would
appear consistent with his general intellectual rigor, he took the
view that logic and merit would, or at least should, be the deciding
factors. Thus he did not need to resort to the histrionics that might
fall to others in public life. There was also an element of what was
proper and what was improper in one's conduct. He obviously felt
that, at a political and a personal level, the task could be done
without the bitterness or division that so often passes as public
debate in Australia.
A memorial tribute
A memorial evening was held to honour Ted on 2
June 1997 in Winthrop Hall at the University of Western Australia.
This evening, only the third such occasion in the history of the
University, reflected the esteem in which he was held as an
undergraduate, a Guild President, a Rhodes Scholar and a member of
the Physics Department for 37 years. It brought together his many
friends and colleagues from academia, science, sport and the
community. Among the many tributes paid to Ted on this evening, some
of which have been included in this record, the most poignant were
those made on behalf of his ex-students by Roger Price. Ted saw his
responsibility for his many students, and their careers, as being
more important than his own academic advancement. It was this
selfless dedication to the discipline and to science that makes it
fitting to close this record with a selection of his student's
reminsciences:
'He let people be themselves, and did not
push his students, but whenever you showed enthusiasm for a project,
Ted matched it many times over.'
'Ted gave the uncanny impression that you
were the sole focus of his time and energy.'
'At 5 in the morning at the Photon factory
in Japan, Ted and I finally found the reflection we had been looking
for after several days with little sleep and over 18
hours without a break...then my experiment
began in earnest. I have Ted to thank for these data which formed the
basis of my PhD. Anyone less concerned for my welfare as a student
would have given up.'
'One of the reasons why Ted was held in
such high regard by the young of his discipline was that he
understood that doing good, coal-face science is hard work. Pursuit
of scientific knowledge at the frontier is as difficult as any human
endeavour that you can name. And invitations for physicists to
endorse a breakfast cereal are few and far between. It tests mental
endurance, inventiveness, and often lays siege to self-esteem. It
demands a willingness to destroy one's most cherished intellectual
edifices when the evidence is unassailable.'
'As a student at the threshold of the
great intellectual journey, you need a mentor, a friend, and an
expert guide through the thicket (and sometimes the minefield) of
existing publications, half-formed ideas, blind alleys and
conjectures on which you must base your own research. Ted was all of
these.'
'He was "one of us"
whether it was when he shed his shoes but otherwise remained fully
clothed for a cricket match, when he bounded out of the Physics
Department every afternoon at 5 o'clock wearing a raggy singlet for a
run through Kings Park accompanied by that day's fellow joggers, or
when he expressed frank delight in a student's solution of a complex
algebraic problem the kind of delight reminiscent of the best
moments of wonderment in one's early career as a student.'
'Ted was an eccentric, in the sense that
the term is used to describe those charismatic, unconventional and
fulfilled individuals who greatly enrich our lives.'
Acknowledgments
We thank Dr Victor W. Maslen, brother of Ted, for
providing details relating to family matters and for preparing the
summary of material for the section on theoretical chemistry. Thanks
are also due to Ted's collaborators, Mark Spackman and Victor
Streltsov, for their help with the precision density and promolecule
sections, and to Allan White for his contributions. We are grateful
for permission to use items from the memorial service at the
University of Western Australia contributed by David Carr, Cyril
Edwards, Michael McCall, Bernard Moulden, Phillip Pendal and Roger
Price.
References
1. Mellor, D.P. The Role of Science and
Industry. Series 4, Vol. 5 of 'Australia in the War
of 1939-1945', Canberra: Australian War Memorial.
2. McWeeny, R. X-ray scattering by aggregates of
bonded atoms IV. Applications to the carbon atom. Acta Cryst.
7, 180-186 (1954).
3. Dawson, B. Aspherical atomic scattering factors
for some light atoms in sp3, sp2 and sp hybrid
valence state approximations. Acta Cryst. 17,
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4. (a) Stewart, R.F. Generalized X-ray scattering
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Bibliography
Structure analysis
1. Maslen, E.N., Jukes, D.E. and Clews, C.J.B.
The crystal and molecular structure of 2:5
diamino-4-mercapto-6-methyl pyrimidine. Acta Cryst. 11,
115-121 (1958).
2. Hodgkin, D.C. and Maslen, E.N. The X-ray
analysis of the structure of cephalosporin C. Biochem. J.
79, 393-402 (1961).
3. Abrahamsson, S., Hodgkin, D.C. and Maslen, E.
N. The crystal structure of phenoxymethylpenicillin. Biochem.
J. 86, 514-535 (1963).
4. Clews, C.J.B., Maslen, E.N., Rietveld, H.M.
and Sabine, T.M. A neutron diffraction examination of
p-diphenylbenzene. Nature 192, 154-155 (1961).
5. Maslen, E.N., Nockolds, C.N. and Paton, M.G.
The stereochemistry of lirioresinol-B. Aust. J. Chem.
15, 161-162 (1962).
6. Duffield, A.M., Jefferies, P.M., Maslen, E.N. and Rae, A.I.M. The structure of bruceol. Tetrahedron
19, 593-607 (1963).
7. Hall, S.R. and Maslen, E.N. The determination
of the crystal structure of methyl melaleucate iodoacetate. Acta
Cryst. 18, 265-279 (1965).
7a. Chopra, C.S., Fuller, M. W., Thieberg, K.J.L., Shaw, D.C., White, D.E., Hall, S.R. and Maslen, E.N.
Triterpenoid compounds: VI Constitution of melaleucic acid 2.
Tetrahedron Letters, 1847-1852 (1963).
8. Oh, Y.-L. and Maslen, E.N. The crystal and
molecular structure of davallol iodoacetate. Acta Cryst.
20, 852-864 (1966).
9. O'Connell, A.M. and Maslen, E.N. The crystal
structure of beyerol monoethylidene iodoacetate. Acta Cryst.
21, 744-754 (1966).
10. Paton, M.G. and Maslen, E.M. The crystal
structure of dibromoeriostoic acid. Acta Cryst. 22,
120-133 (1967).
11. Oh, Y-L. and Maslen, E.N. The crystal and
molecular structure of isoeremolactone. Acta Cryst.
B24, 883-897 (1968).
11a. Oh, Y-L. and Maslen, E.N. The structure and
stereochemistry of isoeremolactone. Tetrahedron Letters,
3291-3294 (1966).
12. Huber, C.P., Hall, S.R. and Maslen, E.N.
The crystal structure of oxotuberostemmonine. Tetrahedron
Letters, 4081-4084 (1968).
13. Rae, A.I.M., and Maslen, E.N. The crystal
structure of sulphanilic acid monohydrate. Acta Cryst.
15, 1285-1291 (1962).
14. Hall, S.R. and Maslen, E.N. The crystal
structure of metanilic acid. Acta Cryst. 18,
301-306 (1965).
15. O'Connor, B.H. and Maslen, E.N. The crystal
structure of a-sulphanilamide. Acta Cryst. 18,
363-366 (1965).
16. O'Connell, A.M. and Maslen, E.N. The crystal
structure of b-sulphanilamide. Acta Cryst. 22,
134-145 (1967).
17. Hall, S.R. and Maslen, E.N. The crystal
structure of orthanilic acid. Acta Cryst. 22,
216-228 (1967).
18. Maslen, E.N. A method for allowing for
thermal anisotropy in evaluating Wilson plots and normalised
structure factors. Acta Cryst. 22, 945-946
(1967).
19. Rietveld, H.M. and Maslen, E.N. The crystal
structure of cadmium n-butyl xanthate. Acta Cryst. 18,
429-436 (1965).
20. Paton, M.G. and Maslen, E.N. A refinement of
the crystal structure of yttria. Acta Cryst. 19,
307-310 (1965).
21. O'Connor, B.H. and Maslen, E.N. The crystal
structure of Cu(II) succinate dihydrate. Acta Cryst.
20, 824-835 (1966).
22. O'Connor, B.H. and Maslen, E.N. A second
analysis of the crystal structure of copper (II)
diethyldithiocarbamate. Acta Cryst. 21, 828-830
(1966).
23. Jones, R.O. and Maslen, E.N. The crystal
structure of the p-complex
[C6H4(CO)2 ]2. Z.
Krist. 123, 330-337 (1966).
24. Rae, A.I.M. and Maslen, E.N. An X-ray
diffraction study of nickel cyanide ammoniate. Z. Krist.
123, 391-396 (1966).
25. Robinson, D.J., Kennard, C.H.L., Maslen, E.N. and Temple, D.M. Crystal structure of
[1,1,4,4,-tetraethylpiperazinium]
dichloride-4-(p-nitroaniline). J. Chem. Soc. B,
1317-1322 (1970).
26. Dewan, J.C., Kepert, D.L., Raston, C.L.,
Taylor, D., White, A.H. and Maslen, E.N. Crystal structures of
tris(NN-diethyldithiocarbamato)oxo-niobium(V) and vanadium (V).
J. Chem. Soc. (Dalton), 2082 2086 (1973).
27. Brotherton, P.D., Maslen, E.N., Pryce, M.W. and White, A.H. Crystal structure of collinsite. Aust. J. Chem. 27,
653-656 (1974).
28. Maslen, E.N., Engelhardt, L.M. and White, A.H. X-ray crystal structure of {7,8,15,17,
18,20-hexahydrodibenzole[e,m]pyrazino-[2,3-b][1,4,8,11]tetra-azacyclo
-tetradecinato(2-)}nickel(II) and of {7,8,15
16,17,18-hexahydrodibenzo[e,m][1,4,8,11]
tetra-aza-cyclo-tetradecinato{2-)} nickel(II). J. Chem. Soc.
(Dalton), 1799-1803 (1974).
29. Hall, S.R., Maslen, E.N. and Cooper, A. The
crystal and molecular structure of 3a,6a-dihydroxy-5b-cholan-24-oic
acid, C24O4H40. Acta Cryst.
B30, 1441-1447 (1974).
30. Maslen, E.N., Cannon, J.R., White, A.H. and
Willis, A.C. The crystal structure of 3-methyl-5-phenylpyrazole.
J. Chem. Soc. (Perkin II), 1298-1301 (1974).
31. Maslen, E.N., Raston, C.L. and White, A.H.
Crystal structure of bis(2,2':6',2'-terpyridyl)cobalt(II)
bromide trihydrate. J. Chem. Soc. (Dalton), 1803-1807
(1974).
32. Brotherton, P.D., Wege, D., White, A.H. and
Maslen, E.N. Crystal and molecular structure of
tetracarbonyl(7,7-dimethoxynorborn-2-ene)chromium(0). J.
Chem. Soc. (Dalton), 1876-1878 (1974).
33. Maslen, E.N., Dewan, J.C., Kepert, D.L.,
Trigwell, K.R. and White, A.H. Stereochemistry of the
MX4Y system (M = metal; X = unidentate, Y = bidentate
ligand): Crystal structure of
tetrachloro-[1,2-bis(dimethylarsino)-3,3,4,4
-tetrafluorocyclobut-1-ene]rhenium(IV). J.Chem.
Soc. (Dalton), 2128-2132 (1974).
34. Maslen, E.N., Raston, C.L., Skelton, B.W.
and White, A.H. Crystal structure of
bis(hydrazine)bis(hydrazinecarboxylato) cobalt(II). Aust. J. Chem. 28, 739-744 (1975).
35. Maslen, E.N., Raston, C.L. and White, A.H.
Crystal structure of
aqua(2,2':6',2':6',2''-quaterpyridyl)sulphitocobalt(III)
nitrate monohydrate. J. Chem. Soc. (Dalton), 323-326
(1975).
36. Maslen, E.N., Raston, C.L., White, A.H. and
Yandell, J.K. Crystal structure of
trans-aquabis(ethylenediamine)sulphitocobalt(III) perchlorate
monohydrate. J. Chem. Soc. (Dalton), 327-329 (1975).
37. Maslen, E.N., Greaney, T. M., Raston, C.L.
and White, A.H. The crystal structure of
catena-di-m-acetylacetonato-cadmium(II). J. Chem. Soc.
(Dalton), 400-402 (1975).
38. Maslen, E.N., Toia, R.F., White, A.H. and
Willis, A.C. Crystal structure of
(5E,12E)-7b-acetoxybertya-5,12-diene-3,14-dione. J. Chem.Soc.
(Perkin II), 1684-1689 (1975).
39. Greaney, T.M., Raston, C.L., White, A.H.
and Maslen, E.N. Crystal structure of potassium
tris(acetylacetonato)cadmate(II) monohydrate. J. Chem. Soc.
(Dalton), 876-879 (1975).
40. Maslen, E.N., Sheppard, P.N., White, A.H.
and Willis, A.C. Crystal structure of the tricyclic diterpene
derivative 18-hydroxydecipia-2(4), 14-dien-1-oic acid. J. Chem.
Soc. (Perkin II), 263-266 (1976).
41. Maslen, E.N., Raston, C.L. and White, A.H.
Crystal structure of an epoxycembradienol,
3,15-epoxy-4-hydroxycembra-7(Z),11(Z)-diene. Tetrahedron,
33, 3305-3311 (1977).
42. Maslen, E.N., Raston, C.L. and White, A.H.
Crystal structure of (Z)-cembr-4-ene-15,19,20-triol. Aust. J.
Chem. 30, 2723 2727 (1977).
43. Baker, E., Maslen, E.N., Watson, K.J. and
White, A.H. Crystal and molecular structure of the ferrous ion
complex of A23187. J. Amer. Chem. Soc. 106,
2860-2864 (1984).
General diffraction matters
44. Maslen, E.N. An X-ray collimator for single
crystal goniometers. J. Sci. Instrum. 35, 110-111
(1958).
45. Abrahamsson, S. and Maslen, E.N. The use of
diverging functions in the solution of three-dimensional Patterson
syntheses. Z. Krist. 118, 1-32 (1963).
46. Rae, A.I.M. and Maslen, E.N. An analysis of
possible methods for refining a non-centrosymmetric structure
containing a partial centre of symmetry. Acta Cryst.
16, 703-704 (1963).
47. Paton, M.G. and Maslen, E.N. The scattering
length of ytttrium for thermal neutrons. Acta Cryst.
19, 679-680 (1965).
48. Hall, S.R. and Maslen, E.N. An experimental
determination of Df for iodine. Acta Cryst. 20,
383-389. (1966).
49. Maslen, E.N. A method for allowing for
thermal anisotropy in evaluating Wilson plots and normalised
structure factors. Acta Cryst. 22, 945-946
(1967).
50. Maslen, E.N. An expression for the
temperature factor of a librating atom. Acta Cryst.
A24, 434-437 (1968).
51. Maslen, E.N. The refinement of structures
with non-crystallographic molecular symmetry. Acta Cryst.
B24, 1165-1170 (1968).
52. Maslen, E.N. A phase refinement of the
crystal structure of benzotrifuroxan. Acta Cryst. B24,
1170-1172 (1968).
53. Maslen, E.N. On the accuracy of electron
density distributions with particular reference to structures with
non-crystallographic molecular symmetry. Acta Cryst.
B24, 1172-1175 (1968).
54. Maslen, E.N. Higher order mechanistic models
for thermal motion in crystal structures. Crystallographic
Computing. Copenhagen: Munksgaard, pp. 227-242 (1970).
55. Maslen, E.N. The effect of models for
thermal motion and two-centre scattering on charge density analysis.
Acta Cryst. A28, S8 (1972).
56. Maslen, E.N. A procedure for the refinement
of accurate diffraction data from molecular crystals. Acta
Cryst. A25, S126 (1969).
57. Delaney, W.T., Furina, R., Maslen, E.N.,
Price, P.F. and Varghese, J.N. Population analysis of molecular
crystals: density function or error sponge? Conference
'Diffraction studies of real atoms and real crystals'.
Abstract 45. I.U.Cr. and Australian Academy of Science
(1974).
58. Davis, C.L., Maslen, E.N. and Varghese, J.N. Minimizing the variance in densities evaluated by Fourier
synthesis. Acta Cryst. A34, 371-377 (1978).
59. Davis, C.L. and Maslen, E.N. Minimizing the
variance in integrals and derivatives of the electron density.
Acta Cryst. A34, 743-746 (1978).
60. Coppens, P., Dam, J., Harkema, S., Feil, R.,
Lehmann, M.S., Goddard, R., Kruger, C., Hellner, E., Johansen, H.,
Larsen, F.K., Koetzle, T.F., McMullan, R.K., Maslen, E.N. and
Stevens, E.D.I.U.Cr. Commission on Charge, Spin and Momentum
Densities. Project on comparison of structural parameters and
electron density maps of
oxalic acid dihydrate. Acta Cryst. A40,
184-195 (1984).
61. Maslen, E.N. Problems in high precision
electron density studies. Methods and applications in
crystallographic computing: Proceedings of the International Summer
School on Crystallographic Computing, Kyoto. Oxford: Clarendon
Press, pp. 333-340 (1984).
62. Spadaccini, N. and Maslen, E.N. Extinction in
the KMF3 perovskites. Acta Cryst. A43,
C-104 (1987).
63. Maslen, E.N. The statistical significance of
difference densities. Acta Cryst. A44, 33-37
(1988).
64. Maslen, E.N., Fox, A.G. and O'Keefe, M.A.
Section 6.1.1. X-ray scattering. In: International Tables for
Crystallography. Volume C Mathematical, Physical and Chemical
Tables (Dordrecht: Kluwer), 476-516 (1992).
65. Maslen, E.N. Section 6.3 X-ray absorption.
In: International Tables for Crystallography. Volume C
Mathematical, Physical and Chemical Tables (Dordrecht: Kluwer),
520-529 (1992).
66. Maslen, E.N. When automatic structure
solution fails. Communicatedabstracts OCM-04.03.04. Acta
Cryst. A49, 138-139 (1993).
67. Streltsov, V.A. and Maslen, E.N. On least
squares estimation of extinction corrections. Acta Cryst.
A48, 651-653 (1992).
68. Maslen, E.N. and Spadaccini, N. Corrections
for extinction from equivalent reflection intensities. Asian
Crystallographic Association Inaugural Meeting, Singapore. Acta
Cryst. A49, Abstract 15V-63 (1992).
69. Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.A., Ishizawa, N.
and Satow, Y. Synchrotron x-ray study of the electron density in
corundum a-Al2O3. Asian Crystallographic
Association Inaugural meeting, Singapore. Acta Cryst.
A49, Abstract 15V-68 (1992).
70. Maslen, E.N. and Streltsova, N.R. On
the reproducability of electron density maps for ideal perovskites.
Asian Crystallographic Association Inaugural meeting, Singapore.
Acta Cryst. A49, Abstract 15V-76 (1992).
71. Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.A., Streltsova,
N.R., Ishizawa, N. and Satow, Y. Synchrotron X-ray study of the
electron density in a-Al2O3. Acta Cryst.
B49, 973-980 (1993).
72. Maslen, E.N., Spadaccini, N., Ito, T.,
Marumo, F., Tanaka, K. and Satow, Y. A synchrotron radiation study of
potassium zinc fluoride perovskite. Acta Cryst. B49,
632-636 (1993).
73. Maslen, E.N. and Spadaccini, N. Extinction
corrections from equivalent reflections. Acta Cryst.
A49, 661-667 (1993).
74. du Boulay, D. and Maslen, E.N. Absorption,
extinction and dead-time correction for high precision imaging with
synchrotron sources. Acta Cryst. A49, 376, Abstract
PS-14.01.12 (1993).
Electron density and bonding
75. Rae, A.I.M. and Maslen, E.N. The importance
of the imaginary part of the scattering factor of bonded carbon.
Acta Cryst. 19, 1061-1063 (1965).
76. Rietveld, E.G., Maslen, E.N. and Clews, C.J.B. An X-ray and neutron diffraction refinement of the structure of
p-terphenyl. Acta Cryst. B26, 693-706 (1970).
77. O'Connell, A.M., Rae, A.I.M. and Maslen, E.N. A discussion of the distribution of bonded electron density.
Acta Cryst. 21, 208-219 (1966).
78. O'Connor, B.H. and Maslen, E.N. The electron
density distribution in 1,3,5-triacetylbenzene. Acta
Cryst. B30, 383-389 (1973).
79. Allen-Williams, A.J., Delaney, W.T., Furina,
R., Maslen, E.N., O'Connor, B.H., Varghese, J.N. and Yung Fook
Hong. Charge density analyses for molecular crystals using Bragg
diffraction data: the effects of error. Acta Cryst.
A31, 101-115 (1975).
80. Price, P.F., Maslen, E.N. and Moore, F.H.
Electron-density studies. I. A neutron diffraction powder study of
diamond. Acta Cryst. A34, 171-172 (1978).
81. Price, P.F. and Maslen, E.N.
Electron-density studies. II. Further comments on the electron
density in diamond. Acta Cryst. A34, 173-183
(1978).
82. Price, P.F., Maslen, E.N. and Mair, S.L.
Electron-density studies. III. A re-evaluation of the electron
distribution in crystalline silicon. Acta Cryst. A34,
183-193 (1978).
82a. Price, P.F., Maslen, E.N. and Mair,
S.L. Detailed charge density studies of crystalline silicon.
International Union of Crystallography Xth International
Congress. Abstract 17.3.11, S225 (1975).
83. Price, P.F., Maslen, E.N. and Delaney, W.T.
Electron densities. IV. A comparison of techniques for charge density
analysis and their application to s-triazine. Acta Cryst.
A34, 194-203 (1978).
84. Price, P.F., Varghese, J.N. and Maslen, E.N. Electron density studies. V. The electron density in melamine
(2,4,6-triamino-s-triazine) with and without exponent
refinement. Acta Cryst. A34, 203-216 (1978).
84a. Varghese, J.N., O'Connell, A.M. and Maslen,
E.N. The X-ray and neutron crystal structure of
2,4,6-triamino-1,3,5-triazine (melamine). Acta Cryst.
B33, 2102-2108 (1977).
85. Maslen, E.N. Electron density, chemical
bonding and solid state interactions. Acta Cryst. A34,
S27 (1978).
86. Maslen, E.N., Ridout, S.C., Varghese, J.N.,
and White, A.H. Electron density distributions in transition metal
complexes. Acta Cryst. A34, S21 (1978).
87. Maslen, E.N. Applications of electron density
studies to complexes of the transition metals. In: Electron and
magnetization densities in molecules and crystals, ed. P. Becker
(NATO Advanced Study Institute Series B: Physics, Volume 48). New
York: Plenum Press, pp.779-789 (1980).
88. Varghese, J.N. and Maslen, E.N. Electron
density in non-ideal metal complexes. I. Copper sulphate
pentahydrate. Acta Cryst. B41, 184-190 (1985).
89. Maslen, E.N., Spadaccini, N., Watson, K.J.
and White, A.H. Electron density in non-ideal metal complexes. II.
Sodium bis(carbonato)cuprate(II). Acta Cryst. B42,
430-436 (1986).
90. Maslen, E.N., Spadaccini, N. and Watson, K.J. Electron density distribution in potassium
bis(carbonato)cuprate(II). Proc. Indian Acad. Sci. (Chem.
Sci.) 92, 443-448 (1983).
91. Maslen, E.N. and Ridout, S.C. Electron
density in non-ideal metal complexes. III.
Bis(hydrazine)bis(hydrazinecarboxylato)cobalt(II). Acta Cryst.
B43, 352-356 (1987).
91a. Maslen, E.N., Ridout, S.C. and White, A.H.
The electron distribution in
bis(hydrazine)-bis(hydrazinecarboxylato)cobalt(II).
International Union of Crystallography Xth International
Congress. Abstract 17.3.10, S225 (1975).
92. Vaalsta, T.P. and Maslen, E.N. Electron
density in chromium sulfate pentahydrate. Acta Cryst.
B43, 448-454 (1987).
93. Maslen, E.N. and Spadaccini, N. Electron
density in potassium bis(dithiooxalato-S,S')nickelate(II). Acta
Cryst. B43, 461-465 (1987).
94. Hester, J.R., Maslen, E.N., Glazer, A.M.
and Stadnicka, K. Jahn-Teller distortion of the electron density in
a-nickel sulfate hexahydrate. Acta Cryst. B49,
641-646 (1993).
95. Maslen, E.N., Ridout, S.C., Watson, K.J.
and Moore, F.H. The structure of Tutton's salts. I. Diammonium
hexa-aquamagnesium (II) sulfate. Acta Cryst. C44,
409-412 (1988).
96. Maslen, E.N., Ridout, S.C. Watson, K.J. and
Moore, F.H. The structure of Tutton's salts. II. Diammonium
hexa-aquanickel(II) sulfate. Acta Cryst. C44,
412-415 (1988).
97. Maslen, E.N., Watson, K.J., Ridout, S.C. and
Moore, F.H. Electron density in diammonium hexa-aquazinc(II) sulfate
an X-ray and neutron study. Acta Cryst. C44,
1510-1514 (1988).
98. Maslen, E.N., Watson, K.J. and Moore, F.H.
Crystal structure and electron density of diammonium hexa-aquacopper
(II) sulfate. Acta Cryst. B44, 102-107 (1988).
99. Maslen, E.N., Ridout, S.C. and Watson, K.J.
Electron density in non-ideal metal complexes. IV. Hexa-aquametal(II)
ammonium sulphates. Acta Cryst. B44, 96-101
(1988).
100. Chatterjee, A., Maslen, E.N. and Watson, K.J. The effect of the lanthanoid contraction on the
nona-aqualanthanoid(III) tris(trifluoromethanesulfonates). Acta
Cryst. B44, 381-386 (1988).
101. Chatterjee, A., Maslen, E.N. and Watson, K.J. Electron densities in crystals of nona-aqualanthanoid(III)
tris(trifluoromethanesulphonates). Acta Cryst. B44,
386-395 (1988).
102. Buttner, R.H. and Maslen, E.N. Electron
difference density in KZnF3 perovskite. Z. Krist.
185, 656 (1988).
103. Buttner, R.H. and Maslen, E.N. Electron difference
density in potassium zinc fluoride perovskite. Acta Cryst.
C44, 1707-1709 (1988).
104. Maslen, E.N. and Spadaccini, N. Electron
density, thermal motion and bonding interactions in the perovskite
structures KMF3 with M = Mn, Fe, Co and Ni. Acta
Cryst. B45, 45-52 (1989).
105. Buttner, R.H., Maslen, E.N. and Spadaccini,
N. Structure, electron density and thermal motion of
KCuF3. Acta Cryst. B46, 131-138
(1990).
106. Buttner, R.H., Maslen, E.N. and Spadaccini,
N. A position-space model for superconductivity in
YBa2Cu3O7-x. Acta Cryst.
B48, 21-30 (1992).
107. Buttner, R.H. and Maslen, E.N. Structural
parameters and electron difference density in
Y2BaCuO5. Acta Cryst. B49,
62-66 (1993).
108. Hsu, R.M., Maslen, E.N. and Ishizawa, N. A synchrotron X-ray study of the electron density in
Y2BaCuO5. Acta Cryst. B52,
569-575 (1996).
109. Hsu, R.M. and Maslen, E.N. A
synchrotron X-ray study of Dr in Y2BaCuO5.
Asian Crystallographic Association Inaugural meeting, Singapore.
Acta Cryst. A49, Abstract 15V-69 (1992).
110. Hester, J., Hsu, R. and Maslen, E.N.
Second-nearest-neighbour interactions and the electron density in
Y2BaCuO5. Acta Cryst. A49,
Abstract PS-14.02.13, 381-382 (1993).
111. Hsu, R. and Maslen, E.N. Effect of
second-nearest-neighbour interactions on the electron density in
Y2BaCuO5 and LiTaO3. Crystal XIX:
Meeting of the Society of Crystallographers in Australia
(Ballarat). Abstract P15 (1995).
112. Buttner, R.H. and Maslen, E.N. Electron
difference density and vibration tensors in SrTiO3.
Acta Cryst. B48, 639-644 (1992).
113. Buttner, R.H. and Maslen, E.N. Electron
difference density and structural parameters in CaTiO3.
Acta Cryst. B48, 644-649 (1992).
114. Buttner, R.H. and Maslen, E.N. Structural
parameters and electron difference density in BaTiO3.
Acta Cryst. B48, 764-769 (1992).
115. Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.A. and
Streltsova, N.R. (I.) X-ray study of the electron density in
calcite, CaCO3. Acta Cryst. B49,
636-641 (1993).
116. Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.A. and
Streltsova, N.R. (II.) X-ray study of the electron density in
magnesite, MgCO3. Acta Cryst. B49,
980-984 (1993).
117. Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.A., Streltsova,
N.R. and Ishizawa, N. Electron density and optical anisotropy in
rhombohedral carbonates. III. Synchrotron X-ray studies of
CaCO3, MgCO3 and MnCO3. Acta
Cryst. B51, 929-939 (1995).
118. Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.A. and
Streltsova, N.R. X-ray study of the electron density in rhombohedral
carbonates, CaCO3, MgCO3, MnCO3.
Acta Cryst. A49, Abstract PS-14.02.15,
382-383 (1993).
119. Ishizawa, N., Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.A.
and Streltsova, N.R. Diffraction study of the electron density and
optical anisotropy in rhombohedral carbonates. Photon Factory
Activity Report 1993, Vol. 11, p. 305 (1994).
120. Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.A. and
Streltsova, N.R. Synchrotron X-ray study of electron density and
optical anisotropy in rhombohedral carbonates. Crystal XVIII:
Meeting of the Society of Crystallographers in Australia (Medlow
Bath). Abstract p. 33 (1994).
121. Hester, J.R., Maslen, E.N., Spadaccini, N.,
Ishizawa, N. and Satow, Y. Electron density in potassium
tetrachloropalladate (K2PdCl4) from synchrotron
radiation data. Acta Cryst. B49, 842-846
(1993).
122. Hester, J.R., Maslen, E.N., Spadaccini, N.,
Ishizawa, N. and Satow, Y. Accurate synchrotron radiation Dr maps for
K2SiF6 and K2PdCl6.
Acta Cryst. B49, 967-973 (1993).
123. Hester, J.R., Maslen, E.N., Spadaccini, N.,
Ishizawa, N. and Satow, Y. Synchrotron radiation vibration amplitudes
and Dr maps for K2SiF6 and
K2PdCl4. Asian Crystallographic Association
Inaugural meeting (Singapore). Abstract 15V-67 (1992).
124. Hester, J.R. and Maslen, E.N. Electron
density structure relationships in some perovskite-type
compounds. Acta Cryst. B51, 913-920 (1995).
125. Maslen, E.N. and Streltsov, V.A. Electron
density imaging with synchrotron radiation. AsCA'95: 2nd
Conference of the Asian Crystallographic Association (Bangkok).
Abstract 1A14 (1995).
126. Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.A., Streltsova,
N.R. and Ishizawa, N. Synchrotron X-ray study of the electron
density in a-Fe2O3. Acta Cryst.
B50, 435-441 (1994).
127. Maslen, E.N., Spadaccini, N., Ito,T.,
Marumo, F. and Satow, Y. A synchrotron radiation study of strontium
titanate. Acta Cryst. B51, 939-942 (1995).
128. du Boulay, D., Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.
A. and Ishizawa, N. A synchrotron X-ray study of the electron density
in YFeO3. Acta Cryst. B51, 921-929
(1995).
129. du Boulay, D., Maslen, E.N. and
Streltsov, V.A. A synchrotron X-study of the electron densitry in
YFe2O3. Proceedings of IC'94. (Roy. Aust.
Chem. Inst.) D49 (1994).
130. du Boulay, D. and Maslen, E.N. The
structural variation within the rare earth orthoferrites and
aluminates. Proceedings of IC'94. (Roy. Aust. Chem. Inst.)
D50 (1994).
131. du Boulay, D. and Maslen, E.N. Structure and
electron density in rare earth aluminates and orthoferrites.
Crystal XIX: Meeting of the Society of Crystallographers in
Australia (Ballarat). Abstract WPM2.3 (1995).
132. Hsu, R., Maslen, E.N., Streltsov,V.A. and
Ishizawa, N. Synchrotron radiation imaging of the deformation
electron density in LiNbO3 and LiTaO3.
AsCA'95: 2nd Conference of the Asian Crystallographic Association
(Bangkok). Abstract 3P42 (1995).
133. Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.A. and Ishizawa,
N. A synchrotron X-ray study of the electron density in C-type rare
earth oxides. Acta Cryst. B52, 414-422 (1996).
134. Maslen, E.N. and Streltsov, V.A.
Synchrotron X-ray study of the electron density in C-type rare earth
oxides. Crystal XIX: Meeting of the Society of Crystallographers
in Australia (Ballarat). Abstract P29 (1995).
135. Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.A. and Ishizawa,
N. A synchrotron X-ray study of the electron density in
SmFeO3. Acta Cryst. B52, 406-413
(1996).
136. Etschmann, B.E., Maslen, E.N. and
Streltsova, N.R. Deformation densities in simple rare earth
compounds. Acta Cryst. A49, Abstract PS-14.02.14,
382 (1993).
137. Streltsov, V.A. and Maslen, E.N.
Synchrotron electron density-property relationship for metal
oxides. IUCr synchrotron radiation satellite meeting, Argonne
National Laboratory. Abstract, 111-03, p. 29 (1996).
138. Maslen, E.N., Streltsov, V.A., Streltsova,
N.R. and Ishizawa, N. Synchrotron X-ray density in the layered LaOCl
structure. Acta Cryst. B52, 576-579 (1996).
139. Milne, A.M. and Maslen, E.N. Electron
density in the spin crossover complex
trans-[N.N'-ethylenebis(salicylidenaminato)]
bis(imidazole)iron(III) perchlorate. Acta Cryst. B44,
254-259 (1988).
140. Chantler, C.T. and Maslen, E.N. Charge
transfer and three-centre bonding inmonoprotonated and diprotonated
2,2'-bipyridylium decahydro-closo-decaborate(2-). Acta
Cryst. B45, 290-297 (1989).
The promolecule
141. Maslen, E.N. and Spackman, M.A. Atomic
charges and electron density partitioning. Aust. J. Phys.
38, 273-287 (1985).
142. Spackman, M.A. and Maslen, E.N. Chemical
properties from the promolecule. J. Phys. Chem. 90,
2020-2027 (1986).
143. Spackman, M.A. and Maslen, E.N. An
empirical estimate of the correlation energy. Chem. Phys.
Letters 126, 19-25 (1986).
144. Trefry, M.G., Maslen, E.N. and Spackman, M.A. Electrostatic, Madelung and cohesive energies for solids. J.
Phys. C: Solid State Phys. 20, 19-28 (1987).
145. Henderson, J.A. and Maslen, E.N. Atom size
and charge in alkali halides. Acta Cryst. A43,
C-102 Abstract 06.2-1 (1987).
146. Maslen, E.N. and Trefry, M.G. 3d-transition
metals: Electron promotion and the independent atom model. J.
Phys. Chem. Solids 49, 753-759 (1988).
147. Spackman, M.A. and Maslen, E.N. Electron
density and the chemical bond. A reappraisal of Berlin's theorem.
Acta Cryst. A41, 347-353 (1985).
148. Etschmann, B.E. and Maslen, E.N.
Atomic charge in diatomic promolecules and in promolecular solids.
Proceedings of IC'94. Roy. Aust. Chem. Inst. 1, D5
(1994).
149. Etschmann, B.E. and Maslen, E.N.
Atomic charges for promolecular solids. Crystal XVIII: Meeting of
the Society of Crystallographers in Australia (Medlow Bath,
N.S.W.). Abstract, Vol. 1, WPM1.2 (1994).
150. Etschmann, B.E. and Maslen, E.N. Properties
of the promolecule. IUCr XVII Congress, Seattle, USA. Acta
Cryst. A53 Abstract PS.09.02.07, C-352 (1996).
150a. Maslen, E.N. and Etschmann, B.E. Bonding
without Ionisation. Aust. J. Phys. 53, 299-316
(2000).
151. Etschmann, B.E. and Maslen, E.N.
Atomic radii from electron densities. Crystal XIX: Meeting of the
Society of Crystallographers in Australia (Ballarat, Victoria).
Abstract P5 (1995).
152. Maslen, E.N. and Etschmann, B.E. Atomic
radii from electron densities. AsCA'95: 2nd Conference of the
Asian Crystallographic Association (Bangkok, Thailand). Abstract
3P46 (1995).
152a. Etschmann, B.E. and Maslen, E.N.). Atomic
Radii from Electron Densities. Aust. J. Phys. 53,
317-332 (2000).
Theoretical chemistry
153. Davis, C.L., Maslen, E.N. and Varghese, J.N. On exact analytical solutions for the few-particle Schrodinger
equation. I. A perturbation study. Proc. Roy. Soc.
A384, 57-88 (1982).
154. Davis, C.L. and Maslen, E.N. On exact
analytical solutions for the few-particle Schrodinger equation. II.
The ground state of helium. Proc. Roy. Soc. A384,
89-105 (1982).
155. Davis, C.L. and Maslen, E.N. On exact
analytical solutions for the few-particle Schrodinger equation. III.
Spatially symmetric S states of two identical particles in the field
of a massive third partricle. J. Phys. A: Math. Gen.
16, 4237-4253 (1983).
156. Davis, C.L. and Maslen, E.N. On exact
analytical solutions for the few-particle Schrodinger equation. IV.
The asymptotic form and normalizability of the wavefunction. J.
Phys. A: Math. Gen. 16, 4255-4264 (1983).
157. Davis, C.L. and Maslen, E.N. Series wave
functions for the helium atom. Int. J. Quant. Chem. 17,
217-225 (1983).
158. Abbott, P.C. and Maslen, E.N. Expansion of
two-body potentials in hyperspherical harmonics. J. Phys. B: At.
Mol. Phys. 17, L489-492 (1984).
159. Gottschalk, J.N. and Maslen, E.N.
Three-body S-state wavefunctions: symmetry and degrees of freedom
associated withnormalisation of the exact wavefunction. J. Phys A:
Math. Gen. 18, 1687-1696 (1985).
160. Abbott, P.C. and Maslen, E.N. A model
wavefunction including electron correlation for the ground state of
the helium isoelectronic sequence. J. Phys. B: At. Mol. Phys.
19, 1595-1605 (1986).
161. McIsaac, K., Gottschalk, J.E. and Maslen, E.N. Closed form expressions for an integral involving the Coulomb
potential. J. Computational Physics, 67, 479-481
(1986).
162. McIsaac, K. and Maslen, E.N. Exact
wavefunctions for few-particle systems: the choice of expansion for
Coulomb potentials. Int. J. Quant. Chem. 31,
361-368 (1987).
163. Abbott, P.C. and Maslen, E.N. Coordinate
systems and analytic expansions for 3-body atomic functions: I.
Partial summation for the Fock expansion in hyperspherical
coordinates. J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 20, 2043-2075
(1987).
164. Gottschalk, J.E., Abbott, P.C. and Maslen,
E.N. Coordinate systems and analytic expansions for three-body
atomic wavefunctions: II. Closed form wavefunctions to second order
in r. J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 20, 2077-2104
(1987).
165. Gottschalk, J.E. and Maslen, E.N.
Coordinate systems and analytic expansions for three-body atomic
wavefunctions: III. Derivative continuity via solutions to Laplace's
equation. J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 20, 2781-2803
(1987).
166. Gottschalk, J.E. and Maslen, E.N. Reduction
formulae for generalised hypergeometric functions of one variable.
J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. 21, 1983-1998 (1988).
167. Maslen, E.N. and Trefry, M.G. Two-center
molecular repulsion integrals over Slater functions. Int. J.
Quant. Chem. 37, 51-68 (1990). Erratum. 38,
871-872 (1990).
General
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