| Literature DB >> 18421161 |
Nobuo Okazaki1, Kazuya Hasegawa, Go Ueno, Hironori Murakami, Takashi Kumasaka, Masaki Yamamoto.
Abstract
A mail-in data collection system makes it possible for beamline users to collect diffraction data without visiting a synchrotron facility. In the mail-in data collection system at SPring-8, users pack crystals into sample trays and send the trays to SPring-8 via a courier service as the first step. Next, the user specifies measurement conditions and checks the diffraction images via the Internet. The user can also collect diffraction data using an automated sample changer robot and beamline control software. For distant users there is a newly developed data management system, D-Cha. D-Cha provides a graphical user interface that enables the user to specify the experimental conditions for samples and to check and download the diffraction images using a web browser. This system is now in routine operation and is contributing to high-throughput beamline operation.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18421161 PMCID: PMC2394786 DOI: 10.1107/S0909049507064679
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the two modes of operation. In a typical procedure, mode-1 is conducted in the day time and mode-2 is operated during the night.
Figure 2Typical scheme of our mail-in data collection. Red and blue boxes show operations performed by users and beamline operators, respectively. Procedures in the yellow box are repeated for each sample.
Figure 3Overview of the compact toolkit designed for mounting crystals by hand.
Figure 4Schematic diagram of relationships among D-Cha, the user and the beamline. Light green lines represent connections over HTTP or secure HTTP (HTTPS).
Figure 5GUI for registering crystals and measurements. (a) Tray Manager: registering SPACE trays. (b) Crystal Manager-1: registering and browsing crystals. The box highlighted in green is a tab for switching between crystals and measurements. (c) Crystal Manager-2: entering and browsing measurement conditions. The box highlighted in green shows measurement status. Users can check the progress of measurements. (d) Condition dialog window.
Figure 6Dialog windows for browsing measurement results. (a) Condition dialog with result file listing. The user can open the result browser by clicking the filename. (b) Crystal snapshot view. (c) XAFS spectrum browser. (d) Diffraction image viewer.
Summary of mail-in data collection with distant users at BL26B2 in 2007A operation period
| Operating days | 26 | |
| Evaluated crystals | 652 | Average 25 crystals/daytime |
| Single datasets | 188 | |
| MAD experiments | 17 (48 datasets) | |
| Total datasets | 236 | Average 9 datasets/night |