Speakers
Description
The double-crystal ultra-small-angle neutron scattering (USANS) diffractometer Kookaburra at ANSTO was made available for user experiments in 2014. Kookaburra allows the characterization of microstructures covering length scales in the range of 0.1–10 µm. Use of the first- and second-order reflections coming off a doubly curved highly oriented mosaic pyrolytic graphite pre-monochromator at a fixed Bragg angle, in conjunction with two interchangeable pairs of Si(111) and Si(311) quintuple-reflection channel-cut crystals, permits operation of the instrument at two individual wavelengths, 4.74 and 2.37 Å. This unique feature among reactor-based USANS instruments allows optimal accommodation of a broad range of samples, both weakly and strongly scattering, in one sample setup [1,2]. The versatility and capabilities of Kookaburra have already resulted in a number of research papers, including studies on hard matter systems like rocks and coal [3,4], as well as soft matter systems like hydrogels, milk or worm-like micelles [5-7]. This clearly demonstrates that this instrument has a major impact in the field of large-scale structure determination. Some of the recent examples will be presented here.
[1] C. Rehm et al, J. Appl. Cryst. 46 (2013) 1699-1704.
[2] C. Rehm et al, J. Appl. Cryst. 51 (2018) 1-8.
[3] T. Blach et al, Journal of Coal Geology 186, (2018), 135-144
[4] R. Sakurovs et al, Energy & Fuels 31(1), (2017), 231-238
[5] J. Whittaker et al, Int. J. Biol. Macromol. 114 (2018), 998-1007
[6] Z. Li et al, Food Hydrocolloid 79, (2018), 170-178.
[7] McCoy et al., J. Colloid Interface Sci. 534, (2019), 518-532
Level of Expertise | Expert |
---|---|
Speakers Gender | Female |
Do you wish to take part in the poster slam | No |