| Literature DB >> 26937237 |
Takashi Ohhara1, Ryoji Kiyanagi1, Kenichi Oikawa1, Koji Kaneko1, Takuro Kawasaki1, Itaru Tamura1, Akiko Nakao2, Takayasu Hanashima2, Koji Munakata2, Taketo Moyoshi2, Tetsuya Kuroda2, Hiroyuki Kimura3, Terutoshi Sakakura3, Chang-Hee Lee4, Miwako Takahashi5, Ken-Ichi Ohshima5, Tamiko Kiyotani6, Yukio Noda7, Masatoshi Arai8.
Abstract
SENJU is a new single-crystal time-of-flight neutron diffractometer installed at BL18 at the Materials and Life Science Experimental Facility of the Japan Accelerator Research Complex (J-PARC). The diffractometer was designed for precise crystal and magnetic structure analyses under multiple extreme sample environments such as low temperature, high pressure and high magnetic field, and for diffraction measurements of small single crystals down to 0.1 mm3 in volume. SENJU comprises three choppers, an elliptical shape straight supermirror guide, a vacuum sample chamber and 37 scintillator area detectors. The moderator-to-sample distance is 34.8 m, and the sample-to-detector distance is 800 mm. The wavelength of incident neutrons is 0.4-4.4 Å (first frame). Because short-wavelength neutrons are available and the large solid angle around the sample position is covered by the area detectors, a large reciprocal space can be simultaneously measured. Furthermore, the vacuum sample chamber and collimator have been designed to produce a very low background level. Thus, the measurement of a small single crystal is possible. As sample environment devices, a newly developed cryostat with a two-axis (ω and φ axes) goniometer and some extreme environment devices, e.g. a vertical-field magnet, high-temperature furnace and high-pressure cell, are available. The structure analysis of a sub-millimetre size (0.1 mm3) single organic crystal, taurine, and a magnetic structure analysis of the antiferromagnetic phase of MnF2 have been performed. These results demonstrate that SENJU can be a powerful tool to promote materials science research.Entities:
Keywords: MLF/J-PARC; extreme sample environments; sub-millimetre crystals; time-of-flight Laue-type single-crystal neutron diffractometer
Year: 2016 PMID: 26937237 PMCID: PMC4762571 DOI: 10.1107/S1600576715022943
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Crystallogr ISSN: 0021-8898 Impact factor: 3.304
Figure 1Design of the neutron optics for SENJU.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of the neutron paths for the different choices of incident wavelength. BC1 and BC2 represent the bandwidth choppers at L = 7.2 m (BC1) and 9.7 m (BC2). (Top) First frame. The T0 chopper works at 50 Hz so as not to cut the short-wavelength neutrons. (Bottom) Second frame. The T0 chopper works at 25 Hz so as not to cut the available wavelength of neutrons.
Figure 3Schematic view of the SENJU main unit. One detector is just visible beneath the sample vacuum chamber.
Figure 4Off-line sample alignment stand for SENJU. The stand has two telescopes and monitors to adjust the position of the sample crystal.
Figure 5Cold head and the ω- and φ-axis goniometer of the cryostat for low-temperature diffraction measurement at SENJU.
Figure 6Screenshots of STARGazer for SENJU. (a) Graphical user interface of the data processing component. (b) Data viewer for all 37 detectors. The circle between the two banks of detectors corresponds to the incident neutron beam. (c) Data viewer and analyzer for each detector. (d) Data viewer in reciprocal space.
Figure 7TOF–Laue diffraction image of a taurine single crystal with 0.1 mm3 volume measured at SENJU. The numbers at the top edge are the 2θ values of the center of each detector. The two-dimensional graph at the lower left presents the TOF profile in the yellow rectangle of the TOF–Laue diffraction image.
Figure 8Crystal packing and molecular structure of taurine determined by single-crystal neutron structure analysis with a 0.1 mm3 volume single crystal at SENJU. Displacement ellipsoids are shown at the 50% probability level.
Figure 9Reported crystal and magnetic structure of MnF2 in the antiferromagnetic phase. The small gray spheres represent F−, the large purple spheres represent Mn2+ and the blue arrows indicate the direction of the magnetic spin of Mn2+.
Figure 10(a) (h0l) plane of the diffraction from MnF2 at 4.3 K. The white circles indicate pure magnetic reflections. (b) Profile of the [h00] axis. The red arrows indicate pure magnetic reflections. As described in the main text, some pure magnetic reflections in the high-Q region (dashed arrows) may be heavily affected by the multiple scattering effect. Al labels the strongest of the weak parasitic powder lines from scattering from the cryostat heat shields.