| Literature DB >> 25931103 |
Michael Drakopoulos1, Thomas Connolley1, Christina Reinhard1, Robert Atwood1, Oxana Magdysyuk1, Nghia Vo1, Michael Hart1, Leigh Connor1, Bob Humphreys1, George Howell1, Steve Davies1, Tim Hill1, Guy Wilkin1, Ulrik Pedersen1, Andrew Foster1, Nicoletta De Maio1, Mark Basham1, Fajin Yuan1, Kaz Wanelik1.
Abstract
I12 is the Joint Engineering, Environmental and Processing (JEEP) beamline, constructed during Phase II of the Diamond Light Source. I12 is located on a short (5 m) straight section of the Diamond storage ring and uses a 4.2 T superconducting wiggler to provide polychromatic and monochromatic X-rays in the energy range 50-150 keV. The beam energy enables good penetration through large or dense samples, combined with a large beam size (1 mrad horizontally × 0.3 mrad vertically). The beam characteristics permit the study of materials and processes inside environmental chambers without unacceptable attenuation of the beam and without the need to use sample sizes which are atypically small for the process under study. X-ray techniques available to users are radiography, tomography, energy-dispersive diffraction, monochromatic and white-beam two-dimensional diffraction/scattering and small-angle X-ray scattering. Since commencing operations in November 2009, I12 has established a broad user community in materials science and processing, chemical processing, biomedical engineering, civil engineering, environmental science, palaeontology and physics.Entities:
Keywords: SAXS; diffraction; high-energy X-rays; time-resolved studies; tomography
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25931103 PMCID: PMC4416690 DOI: 10.1107/S1600577515003513
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Figure 1Schematic optical and functional layout of the I12 JEEP beamline.
Key parameters of the I12 JEEP beamline
| Source | Superconducting wiggler, 4.2T, 48mm periodicity, 21full-field periods |
| Beam acceptance | 1mrad (H) 0.3mrad (V) |
| Working energy range | 53150keV |
| Beam modes | White and monochromatic |
| Monochromator | Si (111) cryo-cooled double bent Laue |
| Bandwidth | 2 103 to 2 104, adjustable |
| Maximum beam size (EH1) | 50mm (H) 15mm (V) |
| Maximum beam size (EH2) | 94mm (H) 28mm (V) |
| Photon flux (EH1, 53keV at 300mA ring current) | 1.8 1011 photons s1 mm2 (0.1% bandwidth)1 |
Figure 2Calculated photon flux at 500 mA in the full 1 mrad × 0.3 mrad fan accepted by the beamline at a distance of 50 m from the source (EH1). The effect of fixed filters and selectable white-beam attenuation is shown.
Figure 3Rocking curves at 50 keV of one bent Laue Si (111) crystal at different bending radii measured with a Si (111) Bragg crystal and a pencil beam. Width (FWHM) and intensity are shown for different crystal bending radii from flat to 35 m.
Figure 4Schematic design of the I12 imaging camera. X-rays enter an optics module (bottom left). A visible-light image is generated in the scintillator and imaged onto a commercial sensor (top right). The visible-light path is folded twice. The inset shows the modular design with four optical modules for different magnification on a linear translation and the sensor on a focus translation and a roll stage.
X-ray imaging camera optics summary
| Module number | Magnification | Field of view High resolution (PCO.Edge) (mm) | Pixel scale High resolution (PCO.Edge) (m pixel1) | Field of view High speed (Phantom 7.3) (mm) | Pixel scale High speed (Phantom 7.3) (m pixel1) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0.346 | 48.8 40.5 | 19.1 | 50.9 38.2 | 63.6 |
| 2 | 0.82 | 20.3 17.1 | 7.9 | 21.5 16.1 | 26.8 |
| 3 | 2 | 8.3 7.0 | 3.2 | 8.8 6.6 | 11.0 |
| 4 | 5 | 3.3 2.8 | 1.3 | 3.5 2.6 | 4.4 |
X-ray illumination limited by beam height to 15mm in EH1 and 28mm in EH2.
Figure 5The EDXD system. (a) Geometry of the detector, detector slits and sample slits showing the semi-annular arrangement of 23 independent Ge crystals. Inset: geometry of gauge-volume dimension D along incoming beam direction. Measured length D and relative position of gauge-volume of all 23 elements at 50 µm × 50 µm incoming beam size for long collimator (b) and short collimator (c).