Conveners
Instruments & Techniques
- Andrew Clulow (ANSTO Australian Synchrotron)
Instruments & Techniques
- There are no conveners in this block
Instruments & Techniques
- There are no conveners in this block
Instruments & Techniques
- There are no conveners in this block
Instruments & Techniques
- There are no conveners in this block
In the space of a few short years, ptychography has moved from a niche method1,2 to emerging as a mainstream technique for user science3,4. Until recently, ptychography required significant expert user experience to collect and reconstruct useable data, with a field of view often limited to a small area (such as a single cell)5 by data collection and reconstruction limitations6. Now however,...
Neutron tomography is a powerful non-destructive technique used to study the internal structure of opaque objects. Neutron images are obtained by exposing an object to a uniform neutron beam. The transmitted neutrons interact with a phosphor which converts from neutrons to visible light, which is then demagnified on to a CCD camera.
The modulation transfer function (MTF) is routinely used to...
Synchrotron radiation has many advantages, but it is also flawed. And its biggest flaw happens to be its fundamental intrinsic property! The radiation is emitted in the plane of the stored beam and we are stuck with the infamous ‘letterbox door’ beam profile. At least when not tinkering with focused undulator beams.
In clinical imaging research, this beam shape is a serious disadvantage. In...
X-ray imaging has progressed in recent decades to capture not only a conventional attenuation image, but also a ‘phase-contrast’ image that visualises those features that are difficult to see with attenuation. More recently, techniques have been developed to capture a ‘dark-field’ signal. The dark-field signal is generated by ultra-small-angle x-ray scattering from unresolved sample features,...
The PD beamline at the Australian Synchrotron (ANSTO) consistently receives requests to carry out total scattering experiments for various materials including battery electrodes, piezoelectrics and coordination frameworks. In this study we describe the capabilities and limitations of carrying out total scattering experiments on the Powder Diffraction beamline. A maximum instrument momentum...
The Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering offers neutron polarisation capabilities which are compatible with six different neutron scattering instruments, using a combination of polarising supermirrors and $^3$He cell spin filters. An overview of these capabilities will be given, followed by a description of some recent experiments which make use of a variety of these capabilities on...
The KOALA single-crystal diffractometer has now been operating for more than a decade and is now nearing retirement (mid-2022). The technical improvements of the new KOALA 2 diffractometer, and the implications for conventional chemical crystallography are described in separate presentations at this meeting.
In this presentation we will present the implications for less conventional studies,...
Current applications of X-ray Absorption Fine Structure (XAFS) to low absorbing samples such as ultra-thin films in semiconductor and nano-devices have been limited. This is expected to not be the case for the phase component of the fine structure as it is generally orders of magnitude larger than the absorption component in the x-ray regime. Here, we present details of precision measurements...
X-ray image contrast can be generated via three mechanisms: (i) attenuation, (ii) phase contrast and (iii) most recently, the dark-field signal, which arises due to the incoherent scattering of the incident x-ray wavefield by unresolved sub-pixel features (microstructure) present in the sample. These contrast mechanisms can be realised using emerging x-ray imaging techniques, such as...
refnx [1] is a next generation reflectometry analysis package, building on its predecessor, Motofit. It has undergone a large amount of collaborative development over the last five years, introducing innovative features that greatly aid the national and international neutron and X-ray reflectometry community:
- a Bayesian statistics core with comprehensive uncertainty analyses and model...
The Micro-Computed Tomography (MCT) beamline is one of the first new beamlines to be constructed at the Australian Synchrotron as part of the BRIGHT program. MCT will complement the existing X-ray imaging/tomography capability provided by the Imaging and Medical Beamline (IMBL), and will target applications requiring higher (sub-micron) spatial resolution and involving smaller samples. MCT...
The ANSTO Lucas Heights campus is home to three world-class small angle neutron scattering (SANS) instruments: Bilby, a time-of-flight SANS instrument [1], Kookaburra, an Ultra-Small Angle Neutron scattering instrument [2] and Quokka, a monochromatic SANS instrument [3]. Together they cover the structure of materials from 1 nm to > 20 microns. As well as recent scientific highlights, we here...
The neutron radiography / tomography / imaging instrument DINGO is operational since October 2014 to support research at ANSTO. DINGO provides a useful tool to give a different insight into objects. A major part of applications from research and industrial users was demanding high resolution setup and fast scans on DINGO. The neutron beam size can be adjusted to the sample size from 25 x 25 mm...
The Beryllium filter spectrometer on Taipan is a low-energy band-pass spectrometer that employs a number of materials to effectively scatter out neutrons of higher energies and transmit only neutrons in the energy range, ef=1.2±0.5 meV. Here in this study the spectrometer response is studied in order to understand and identify the inherent background from the spectrometer itself.
Ambient air...
BioSAXS is one of the new beamlines to be constructed at the Australian Synchrotron within the BRIGHT program. The beamline is currently under construction and it is scheduled to phase into user operations in mid-late 2022. BioSAXS will be a high-flux (~5 x 1014 ph/sec) small angle X-ray scattering beamline dedicated to all sorts of solution scattering including dispersions, gels and soft...
Since the last ANSTO User Meeting the sample environment group at ACNS has supported our facility users with a range of unique developments and set ups. We have had a change in structure with the laboratory group forming and working alongside us. We will report on the progress on our ongoing projects on Direct Laser Melting (DLM) deposition system co-funded by a NSW RAAP grant. Also underway...
This presentation aims to provide a summary on technical aspects and applications of our synchrotron macro ATR-FTIR microspectroscopy, unique to the Infrared Microspectroscopy (IRM) beamline at ANSTO–Australian Synchrotron.1 The device was developed by modifying the cantilever arm of a standard macro-ATR unit to accept Ge-ATR elements. Coupling synchrotron-IR beam to the Ge-ATR...
In 2019, the Australian Space Agency made its debut in the international scene of the space exploration. Securing the future of Australia’s space sector is the core of the Advancing Space: Australian Civil space Strategy 2019-2028. This Government plan reminds that space-based technology and services not only interests space missions, but benefits all Australians daily as for weather...
Propagation-based phase-contrast X-ray imaging (PB-PCXI) is a technique suitable for imaging weakly-attenuating objects, e.g., biological samples, as it utilizes both attenuation and refraction effects. Such effects are material dependent, and described by the X-ray’s complex refractive index n=1-δ+iβ, where β and δ describe attenuation, and refraction, respectively. Phase retrieval algorithms...
The Australian Synchrotron X-ray Fluorescence Microscopy (XFM) beamline has recently implemented fast-scanning ptychography, a scanning X-ray diffraction microscopy method. Ptychography creates super-resolution images from transmitted microdiffraction patterns acquired as the sample is scanned through the beam. High-speed detectors and high-performance computers are required to iteratively...
The Medium Energy Spectroscopy (MEX) beamline aims to facilitate a wide variety of ex- and in-situ experimental work from a variety of research areas. As such, we will provide a number of sample environments as standard set-up, in addition to ancillary equipment that can be used with custom or BYO sample environments. Sample environments will likely include; room temperature cell,...
The medium energy range offers unique opportunities for synchrotron-based X-ray absorption spectroscopy across the sciences. In particular, the K-absorption edges of alkali and alkali earth elements, e.g. K and Ca, s-group elements, e.g. S, P and Se, along with d-block elements, e.g. Mn, Fe, Cu all fall within this energy range. As do various L- and M-edges for heavier elements, e.g....
The Spatz neutron beam instrument is the latest to be installed and commissioned in the Neutron Guide Hall at the 20 MW OPAL Research Reactor. Spatz is a time-of-flight neutron reflectometer used for studying nanoscale structures at surfaces and interfaces and utilises a vertical sample geometry / horizontal scattering geometry. The instrument is situated at the end position of the CG2B...
SIKA, the cold-neutron triple-axis spectrometer is on the CG4 beam port at the OPAL reactor, ACNS, ANSTO. We have reported the capabilities and status of SIKA in the last several user's meetings.
In this meeting, we discuss the recent development of polarized neutron scattering experiments on SIKA. A 3He polarization analysis system is available for SIKA. We have performed several user...
Serial Synchrotron Crystallography (SSX) is rapidly emerging as a promising technique for collecting data for time-resolved structural studies or for performing room temperature micro-crystallography measurements using micro-focused beamlines. When performed using ultra-bright X-ray Free Electron Laser (XFEL) sources serial crystallography typically involves a process known as...
The MX3 beamline will extend the capabilities of the existing suite of MX beamlines at the Australian Synchrotron. It will allow collection on crystals that are too small or weakly diffracting for the current beamlines. A high level of automation will transform membrane protein micro crystal collection and high throughput projects such as drug and fragment screening. Sample positioning will be...
Our chemistry community participated generously in the workshops which led to the commissioning of the first suite of neutron beam instruments at ANSTO's OPAL reactor. That community has now become a core group of users of the KOALA diffractometer which has resulted in studies which have underpinned superb publications. Whether it is the careful systematic work required to validate the new...