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1.
An X‐ray magnetic circular dichroism experiment under multiple extreme conditions, 2 ≤T≤ 300 K, H≤ 10 T and P≤ 50 GPa, has been achieved at SPring‐8 BL39XU. A combination of the high‐brilliant X‐ray beam and a helicity‐controlled technique enabled the dichroic signal to be recorded with high accuracy. The performance is shown by the outcome of pressure‐induced ferromagnetism in Mn3GaC and the pressure‐suppressed Co moment in ErCo2. Two technical developments, a tiny diamond anvil cell inserted into a superconducting magnet and in situ pressure calibration using 90° Bragg diffraction from a NaCl marker, are also presented. X‐ray magnetic spectroscopy under multiple extreme conditions is now opening a new approach to materials science.  相似文献   

2.
A modified Drickamer anvil apparatus has been developed to combine with monochromatic synchrotron radiation for high‐pressure X‐ray diffraction and radiography in the GSECARS bending‐magnet station, 13‐BM‐D, at the Advanced Photon Source, Argonne, USA. Using this experimental set‐up, deformation experiments can be carried out at pressures in excess of 30 GPa at high temperatures. Differential stresses and total axial strains of polycrystalline platinum and Mg2SiO4 ringwoodite have been measured up to 32 GPa at room temperature using tungsten carbide anvils. The total axial strain of the platinum increases with pressure and reaches about 55% at the highest pressure. A test run using a composite sintered diamond anvil system was performed. The use of X‐ray‐tranparent anvils enables the entire Debye rings to be observed up to 10° 2θ. With high‐energy photons (65–70 keV), this allows a coverage in Q (= 2π sinθ/λ) to about 3 Å?1, thus making it possible to evaluate hydrostatic pressure and differential stress in crystalline minerals using diffraction. This, coupled with the ability to determine axial strain, allows deformation studies to be performed to pressures above 30 GPa.  相似文献   

3.
An end‐station for X‐ray Raman scattering spectroscopy at beamline ID20 of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility is described. This end‐station is dedicated to the study of shallow core electronic excitations using non‐resonant inelastic X‐ray scattering. The spectrometer has 72 spherically bent analyzer crystals arranged in six modular groups of 12 analyzer crystals each for a combined maximum flexibility and large solid angle of detection. Each of the six analyzer modules houses one pixelated area detector allowing for X‐ray Raman scattering based imaging and efficient separation of the desired signal from the sample and spurious scattering from the often used complicated sample environments. This new end‐station provides an unprecedented instrument for X‐ray Raman scattering, which is a spectroscopic tool of great interest for the study of low‐energy X‐ray absorption spectra in materials under in situ conditions, such as in operando batteries and fuel cells, in situ catalytic reactions, and extreme pressure and temperature conditions.  相似文献   

4.
X‐ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) is one of the most powerful tools for investigating the magnetic properties of different types of materials that display ferromagnetic behavior. Compared with other magnetic‐sensitive techniques, XMCD has the advantage of being element specific and is capable of separating the spin and magnetic moment contributions associated with each element in the sample. In samples involving, for example, buried atoms, clusters on surfaces or at interfaces, ultrathin films, nanoparticles and nanostructures, three experimental conditions must be present to perform state‐of‐the‐art XMCD measurements: high magnetic fields, low temperatures and an ultra‐high‐vacuum environment. This paper describes a new apparatus that can be easily installed at different X‐ray and UV beamlines at the Brazilian Synchrotron Light Laboratory (LNLS). The apparatus combines the three characteristics described above and different methods to measure the absorption signal. It also permits in situ sample preparation and transfer to another chamber for measurement by conventional surface science techniques such as low‐energy electron diffraction (LEED), reflection high‐energy electron diffraction (RHEED), X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and X‐ray photoelectron diffraction (XPD). Examples are given of XMCD measurements performed with this set‐up on different materials.  相似文献   

5.
A hard X‐ray transparent triaxial deformation apparatus, called HADES, has been developed by Sanchez Technologies and installed on the microtomography beamline ID19 at the European Radiation Synchrotron Facility (ESRF). This rig can be used for time‐lapse microtomography studies of the deformation of porous solids (rocks, ceramics, metallic foams) at conditions of confining pressure to 100 MPa, axial stress to 200 MPa, temperature to 250°C, and controlled aqueous fluid flow. It is transparent to high‐energy X‐rays above 60 keV and can be used for in situ studies of coupled processes that involve deformation and chemical reactions. The rig can be installed at synchrotron radiation sources able to deliver a high‐flux polychromatic beam in the hard X‐ray range to acquire tomographic data sets with a voxel size in the range 0.7–6.5 µm in less than two minutes.  相似文献   

6.
A high‐temperature furnace with an induction heater coil has been designed and constructed for in situ X‐ray spectroscopic experiments under controlled atmospheric conditions and temperatures up to 3275 K. The multi‐purpose chamber design allows working in backscattering and normal fluorescence mode for synchrotron X‐ray absorption and emission spectroscopy. The use of the furnace is demonstrated in a study of the in situ formation of Cr oxide between 1823 K and 2023 K at logPO2 values between ?10.0 and ?11.3 using X‐ray absorption near‐edge spectroscopy. The set‐up is of particular interest for studying liquid metals, alloys and other electrically conductive materials under extreme conditions.  相似文献   

7.
An energy‐dispersive X‐ray absorption spectroscopy beamline mainly dedicated to X‐ray magnetic circular dichroism (XMCD) and material science under extreme conditions has been implemented in a bending‐magnet port at the Brazilian Synchrotron Light Laboratory. Here the beamline technical characteristics are described, including the most important aspects of the mechanics, optical elements and detection set‐up. The beamline performance is then illustrated through two case studies on strongly correlated transition metal oxides: an XMCD insight into the modifications of the magnetic properties of Cr‐doped manganites and the structural deformation in nickel perovskites under high applied pressure.  相似文献   

8.
In situ microtomography at high pressure and temperature has developed rapidly in the last decade, driven by the development of new high‐pressure apparatus. It is now routinely possible to characterize material under high pressure with acquisition times for tomograms of the order of tens of minutes. Here, advantage was taken of the possibility to combine the use of a pink beam projected through a standard Paris–Edinburgh press in order to demonstrate the possibility to perform high‐speed synchrotron X‐ray tomography at high pressure and temperature allowing complete high‐resolution tomograms to be acquired in about 10 s. This gives direct visualization to rapidly evolving or unstable systems, such as flowing liquids or reacting components, and avoids assumptions in the interpretation of quenched samples. Using algebraic reconstruction techniques allows the missing angle artefacts that result from the columns of the press to be minimized.  相似文献   

9.
When studying electro‐mechanical materials, observing the structural changes during the actuation process is necessary for gaining a complete picture of the structure–property relationship as certain mechanisms may be meta‐stable during actuation. In situ diffraction methods offer a powerful and direct means of quantifying the structural contributions to the macroscopic strain of these materials. Here, a sample cell is demonstrated capable of measuring the structural variations of electro‐mechanical materials under applied electric potentials up to 10 kV. The cell is designed for use with X‐ray scattering techniques in reflection geometry, while simultaneously collecting macroscopic strain data using a linear displacement sensor. The results show that the macroscopic strain measured using the cell can be directly correlated with the microscopic response of the material obtained from diffraction data. The capabilities of the cell have been successfully demonstrated at the Powder Diffraction beamline of the Australian Synchrotron and the potential implementation of this cell with laboratory X‐ray diffraction instrumentation is also discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Polychromatic synchrotron undulator X‐ray sources are useful for ultrafast single‐crystal diffraction under shock compression. Here, simulations of X‐ray diffraction of shock‐compressed single‐crystal tantalum with realistic undulator sources are reported, based on large‐scale molecular dynamics simulations. Purely elastic deformation, elastic–plastic two‐wave structure, and severe plastic deformation under different impact velocities are explored, as well as an edge release case. Transmission‐mode diffraction simulations consider crystallographic orientation, loading direction, incident beam direction, X‐ray spectrum bandwidth and realistic detector size. Diffraction patterns and reciprocal space nodes are obtained from atomic configurations for different loading (elastic and plastic) and detection conditions, and interpretation of the diffraction patterns is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The X‐ray PIV (particle image velocimetry) technique has been used as a non‐invasive measurement modality to investigate the haemodynamic features of blood flow. However, the extraction of two‐dimensional velocity field data from the three‐dimensional volumetric information contained in X‐ray images is technically unclear. In this study, a new two‐dimensional velocity field extraction technique is proposed to overcome technological limitations. To resolve the problem of finding a correction coefficient, the velocity field information obtained by X‐ray PIV and micro‐PIV techniques for disturbed flow in a concentric stenosis with 50% severity was quantitatively compared. Micro‐PIV experiments were conducted for single‐plane and summation images, which provide similar positional information of particles as X‐ray images. The correction coefficient was obtained by establishing the relationship between velocity data obtained from summation images (VS) and centre‐plane images (VC). The velocity differences between VS and VC along the vertical and horizontal directions were quantitatively analysed as a function of the geometric angle of the test model for applying the present two‐dimensional velocity field extraction technique to a conduit of arbitrary geometry. Finally, the two‐dimensional velocity field information at arbitrary positions could be successfully extracted from X‐ray images by using the correction coefficient and several velocity parameters derived from VS.  相似文献   

12.
Although the idea of an X‐ray absorption spectrometer in dispersive geometry was initially conceived for the study of transient phenomena, the instrument at the European Synchrotron Radiation facility has been increasingly exploited for studies at extreme conditions of pressure using diamond anvil cells. The main results of investigations at high pressure obtained at beamline ID24 are reviewed. These concern not only fundamental topics, such as the local and the electronic structure as well as the magnetic properties of matter, but also geological relevant questions such as the behaviour of Fe in the main components of the Earth's interior.  相似文献   

13.
A high‐pressure cell for in situ X‐ray reflectivity measurements of liquid/solid interfaces at hydrostatic pressures up to 500 MPa (5 kbar), a pressure regime that is particularly important for the study of protein unfolding, is presented. The original set‐up of this hydrostatic high‐pressure cell is discussed and its unique properties are demonstrated by the investigation of pressure‐induced adsorption of the protein lysozyme onto hydrophobic silicon wafers. The presented results emphasize the enormous potential of X‐ray reflectivity studies under high hydrostatic pressure conditions for the in situ investigation of adsorption phenomena in biological systems.  相似文献   

14.
An experimental configuration that combines the powerful capabilities of a short‐term shearing apparatus with simultaneous optical and X‐ray scattering techniques is demonstrated, connecting the earliest events that occur during shear‐induced crystallization of a polymer melt with the subsequent kinetics and morphology development. Oriented precursors are at the heart of the great effects that flow can produce on polymer crystallization (strongly enhanced kinetics and formation of highly oriented crystallites), and their creation is highly dependent on material properties and the level of stress applied. The sensitivity of rheo‐optics enables the detection of these dilute shear‐induced precursors as they form during flow, before X‐ray techniques are able to reveal them. Then, as crystallization occurs from these precursors, X‐ray scattering allows detailed quantification of the characteristics and kinetics of growth of the crystallites nucleated by the flow‐induced precursors. This simultaneous combination of techniques allows unambiguous correlation between the early events that occur during shear and the evolution of crystallization after flow has stopped, eliminating uncertainties that result from the extreme sensitivity of flow‐induced crystallization to small changes in the imposed stress and the material. Experimental data on a bimodal blend of isotactic polypropylenes are presented.  相似文献   

15.
The ability to generate new electrochemically active materials for energy generation and storage with improved properties will likely be derived from an understanding of atomic‐scale structure/function relationships during electrochemical events. Here, the design and implementation of a new capillary electrochemical cell designed specifically for in situ high‐energy X‐ray diffraction measurements is described. By increasing the amount of electrochemically active material in the X‐ray path while implementing low‐Z cell materials with anisotropic scattering profiles, an order of magnitude enhancement in diffracted X‐ray signal over traditional cell geometries for multiple electrochemically active materials is demonstrated. This signal improvement is crucial for high‐energy X‐ray diffraction measurements and subsequent Fourier transformation into atomic pair distribution functions for atomic‐scale structural analysis. As an example, clear structural changes in LiCoO2 under reductive and oxidative conditions using the capillary cell are demonstrated, which agree with prior studies. Accurate modeling of the LiCoO2 diffraction data using reverse Monte Carlo simulations further verifies accurate background subtraction and strong signal from the electrochemically active material, enabled by the capillary working electrode geometry.  相似文献   

16.
Energy‐dispersive X‐ray absorption spectroscopy is now a well established method that has been applied to a broad range of applications. At the energy‐dispersive EXAFS beamline of the ESRF, ID24, the recently achieved 5 × 5 µm focal spot combined with fast acquisition has allowed complex and non‐uniform samples to be mapped and images to be obtained where each pixel contains full XAS information. This method has been applied to a study under extreme conditions of pressure and temperature in a diamond anvil cell in transmission mode. The case study was the investigation of the Fe K‐edge XANES of (Mg,Fe)SiO3‐perovskite and (Mg,Fe)O‐ferropericlase on decomposition of the spinel‐structured olivine [γ‐(Mg,Fe)2SiO4] at 78 (3) GPa after laser heating at 2200 (100) K.  相似文献   

17.
The first microbeam synchrotron X‐ray fluorescence (µ‐SXRF) beamline using continuous synchrotron radiation from Siam Photon Source has been constructed and commissioned as of August 2011. Utilizing an X‐ray capillary half‐lens allows synchrotron radiation from a 1.4 T bending magnet of the 1.2 GeV electron storage ring to be focused from a few millimeters‐sized beam to a micrometer‐sized beam. This beamline was originally designed for deep X‐ray lithography (DXL) and was one of the first two operational beamlines at this facility. A modification has been carried out to the beamline in order to additionally enable µ‐SXRF and synchrotron X‐ray powder diffraction (SXPD). Modifications included the installation of a new chamber housing a Si(111) crystal to extract 8 keV synchrotron radiation from the white X‐ray beam (for SXPD), a fixed aperture and three gate valves. Two end‐stations incorporating optics and detectors for µ‐SXRF and SXPD have then been installed immediately upstream of the DXL station, with the three techniques sharing available beam time. The µ‐SXRF station utilizes a polycapillary half‐lens for X‐ray focusing. This optic focuses X‐ray white beam from 5 mm × 2 mm (H × V) at the entrance of the lens down to a diameter of 100 µm FWHM measured at a sample position 22 mm (lens focal point) downstream of the lens exit. The end‐station also incorporates an XYZ motorized sample holder with 25 mm travel per axis, a 5× ZEISS microscope objective with 5 mm × 5 mm field of view coupled to a CCD camera looking to the sample, and an AMPTEK single‐element Si (PIN) solid‐state detector for fluorescence detection. A graphic user interface data acquisition program using the LabVIEW platform has also been developed in‐house to generate a series of single‐column data which are compatible with available XRF data‐processing software. Finally, to test the performance of the µ‐SXRF beamline, an elemental surface profile has been obtained for a piece of ancient pottery from the Ban Chiang archaeological site, a UNESCO heritage site. It was found that the newly constructed µ‐SXRF technique was able to clearly distinguish the distribution of different elements on the specimen.  相似文献   

18.
Combined small‐ and wide‐angle X‐ray scattering (SAXS/WAXS) is a powerful technique for the study of materials at length scales ranging from atomic/molecular sizes (a few angstroms) to the mesoscopic regime (~1 nm to ~1 µm). A set‐up to apply this technique at high X‐ray energies (E > 50 keV) has been developed. Hard X‐rays permit the execution of at least three classes of investigations that are significantly more difficult to perform at standard X‐ray energies (8–20 keV): (i) in situ strain analysis revealing anisotropic strain behaviour both at the atomic (WAXS) as well as at the mesoscopic (SAXS) length scales, (ii) acquisition of WAXS patterns to very large q (>20 Å?1) thus allowing atomic pair distribution function analysis (SAXS/PDF) of micro‐ and nano‐structured materials, and (iii) utilization of complex sample environments involving thick X‐ray windows and/or samples that can be penetrated only by high‐energy X‐rays. Using the reported set‐up a time resolution of approximately two seconds was demonstrated. It is planned to further improve this time resolution in the near future.  相似文献   

19.
This paper is a continuation and extension of our earlier work (X‐ray Spectrom. 2010 , 39, 127–134, DOI:10.1002/xrs.1215) on the development of a software platform CATGIXRF, as a solution to provide non‐destructive evaluation of nanostructured materials. Here, we describe an interactive graphical user interface (GUI) for the CATGIXRF program. The newly developed GUI interface facilitates determination of microstructural parameters on angstrom length scale for the nanostructured thin layered materials using synchrotron as well as laboratory X‐ray sources. It allows combined analysis capabilities for both the X‐ray reflectivity and grazing incidence X‐ray fluorescence (GIXRF) data simultaneously, thus enabling us a greater sensitivity for the determination of microstructural parameters such as thickness, interface mixing, and roughness of a thin film medium with improved accuracies. The utility and various newly added salient features of the GUI‐CATGIXRF program are described by providing example calculations as well as by analyzing experimentally a few thin film structures with different surface‐interface properties. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

20.
Percy Williams Bridgman's impact on science began in 1909 with his first three experimental papers. These publications on high pressure calibration, techniques, and compressibility, together with the many articles that followed, established his influence on the course of modern high pressure research. Grounded in classical thermodynamics and practical mechanics, his developments showed how the variable of pressure leads to myriad transformations in materials. Studies carried out under a broader range of conditions now provide unprecedented insights into chemical and physical properties at multimegabar pressures and temperatures from millikelvins to thousands of degrees, where novel electronic, magnetic, and superconducting phases are now being discovered. With careful attention to experimental techniques and material performance, Bridgman extended the available pressure range that could be achieved in the laboratory with the development of new devices. We are now witness to continued refinement of static and dynamic compression methods and in situ measurement techniques, including the marriage of high pressure methods with large facilities such as synchrotron, neutron, and laser sources. Bridgman showed the broad range of implications of this work; the modern field of high pressure research now spans physics and chemistry, geosciences and planetary science, materials science and technology, and biology. Selected examples illustrate Bridgman's impact and legacy in this, his second century. For dense hydrogen, new insights have been obtained from high PT measurements as well as studies of alloys and compounds of hydrogen, leading to the creation of new metallic and superconducting phases. Studies of other hydrogen-rich systems provide both tests of fundamental theory and potentially useful materials for hydrogen storage. High pressure studies of oxides have led to new ferroelectric and multiferroic materials and phases with remarkable properties that guide the design and fabrication of new devices. With the discovery of super-Earths outside our solar system, the high pressure properties of silicates, oxides, volatiles, and the full complement of planetary materials are now problems of cosmic importance well beyond the conditions found on and within the Earth. Developments in high pressure biology are addressing the question of the depth of the biosphere, the processes and reservoirs of carbon in our planet, and new insights into the origins of life as we know it, as well as the possibility of extraterrestrial life. Improved materials that can withstand high PT conditions and other extreme environments include new forms of diamond, which are advancing experimental methods and finding numerous applications in advanced technology. These developments dovetail with synergetic advances in a broad spectrum of radiation techniques including coherent X-ray, intense neutron, and ultrabright laser sources.  相似文献   

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