You didn't say what you're trying to find out or even which edge you're doing 
this at.  That being the case, it's a little hard to know
what the best strategy is.  A few things come to mind:

1.      If you're looking for the environment of the Ga, then obviously, BaO 
and Ti2O3 aren't terribly useful.  You'd want something
with Ga in an environment similar to that of the unknown.  Is there such a 
thing as BaGa8Ox with the same structure as BaTi8O16, which
I assume is known?  Another possibility is to use as a reference something in 
which instead of Ga as the central atom, you have something
nearby in the periodic table, but in a similar environment.  Ga2O3 would only 
be useful if all you're after is Ga-O and maybe Ga-Ga distances.
Check for other, known oxides in the Ba-Ti-Ga-O system or at least Ba-Ga-O or 
Ti-Ga-O.

2.      If you're after what the Ga does to the environment of the major 
elements, then perhaps you could use BaTi8O16 (if that exists)or
barium titanate.  These would give you the Ba-O, Ti-O, and (Ba,Ti)-(Ba,Ti) 
paths.  My intuitive guess is that if x is small, then you'd be looking
for small changes, so the best standard of all is the x=0 material, if it 
exists.  Fit that, then add in (Ba,Ti)-Ga paths as appropriate and let
the other paths change and see what happens for x >0.

3.      Is the doped material available as a single crystal?  Has the structure 
been solved?  Perhaps that information could be used to constrain
the structure.

4.      The stoichiometry you give, Ba(Ti,Ga)8O16, requires the (Ti,Ga) to be 
in a mixed-valent state (assuming Ba=2, average = 30/8 = 15/4 = 3.75).
That being the case, I'm guessing that the Ga substitutes for the Ti3+, either 
shifting the average valence so that O isn't 16 anymore or just
replacing the Ti3+ until you've replaced it all.  Either way, Ti XANES would be 
informative.   There are many papers about the interpretation
of Ti K-edge XANES.

5.      If my guess about Ga substituting only for Ti3+ is correct, *and* you 
quoted the correct stoichiometry, then,
        a)      Something should happen for x>2 because you can't get an 
average valence of 3.75 anymore.
        b)      If the Ti3+ and Ti4+ sites are different enough, say 
octahedral+tetrahedral, then the Ga EXAFS should look like
                that of the Ti3+ only.
        c)      Ga3+ is slightly smaller than Ti3+, so you might see a small 
contraction around the Ga relative to the Ti.

Good luck.
        mam

On 11/18/2014 2:32 PM, Yun Xu wrote:
Hi all
I have a complex oxide BaTi8-xGaxO16. What standards I should run?
Ga is the dopant. I guess I should run the sample without dopant BaTi8O16 as 
standard, or the simple oxide as BaO, TiO2 Ga2O3?  or is the standard necessary?
Also, I have colleage working on DFT, I assume the theoretical standard is the 
result from the DFT calculation, and by using the coordinates of the atoms, I 
can run FEFF and fit the data.
Thanks
Yun


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