Title: The ALS:
1- The ALS
- Progress and Prospects
- 2007 Users Meeting
- October 4, 2007
- Roger Falcone
2Our Mission
- Support users
- in doing outstanding science
- in a safe environment
3Gary Krebs ALS User Services Group Leader
19432007
Remembering Gary Krebs 1125 Friday
4Major organizational changes
- 6 new beamline scientists hired
- ESH Manager - welcome Jim Floyd
- Group Leader for User Services - welcome Susan
Bailey - Division Deputy for Engineering - welcome Peter
Denes - accelerator and floor operators working in
collaboration - Thanks to increased budgets in FY07!
5ALS Organization
6Safety Roles and Responsibilities
7General User Proposals continue to increase
8ALS Beamlines 2007
9Delivered User Hours
FY07 includes planned shutdowns for major
upgrades that enable new capabilities
10Delivered Instrument Hours
11Users Served / Delivered Instrument Hours
12(No Transcript)
13Demolished Building 10 space for User Support
Building
14ALS User Support Building
15ALS User Support Building
Groundbreaking Ceremony 1215 today
Ready by 2009
16Berkeley Lab Guest House
17Berkeley Lab Guest House
Groundbreaking Ceremony 1200 friday
Ready by 2009
18Looking forward to the future of the ALS
- Operate safely (seismic program, staffing,
training) - Increase staff at beamlines and in operations,
and support them - Increase laboratory capability for users (USB)
- Proceed towards goals in Strategic Plan
- Develop resources for Wave One
- Build momentum for Waves Two and Three
- Analyze needs and options beyond current vision
- Utilize resources to support science
- Replace aging infrastructure
- to ensure operations and increase productivity
- klystron, beamline optics, control and interlock
systems - - Address broader needs
- Increased brightness and flux
- Enhanced metrology and detectors
- New insertion devices (utilize half-straight
sections)
19ALS Status
- Improvements in FY07
- Planned upgrades
- Planning for renewal
- Details in Operations Update Session 305 (Dave
Robin)
20ALS Upgrades
RF System Upgrade
Quasi-Periodic Undulator for MERLIN
21 Status of the Klystron Upgrade
Provide a robust RF system for next 20 years
- We received funding from BES
- to begin klystron replacement project!
- Scope and Schedule
- Replace Klystron with 4 Inductive Output Tubes
Spring 2009 - Upgrade Low Level RF Control System Spring
2010/2011 - Power RF Cavities with independent RF Sources
Spring 2011
22MERLIN Quasi Periodic Undulator
- Most complicated insertion device to be installed
at the ALS - Quasi Periodic for spectral purity
- Elliptically Polarizing
- Challenges
- Beam Dynamics
- Machine Protection
- Status
- Fully Assembled
- Installed First Set of Shims for Dynamics
Correction - Installation Plan
- Begin end of Oct 2007
- Complete first week of Jan 2008
23MERLIN meV-resolution beamline
- Specifications
- Resolving power E/?E 100,000 1 meV when
photon energy below 100 eV - Photon energy range 8eV to 150eV
- Quasi-periodic Elliptically Polarized Undulador
(EPU) - Photon Flux 5 ?1011 photons/s/meV for high
resolution gratings
Optical layout
24Top-off Project
- Top-off mode yields quasi-continuous current
- - increases in brightness and stability
- Requires upgrade of injector
- - components operational
- Requires radiation safety effort
- - April review of tracking studies
- with reps from APS, ESRF,
- SOLEIL, DIAMOND, and NSLS
- We believe that ALS has provided a reliable
approach to identify all unsafe conditions. They
are now in a position to proceed with the
analysis of all of their beam lines. - - need to complete radiation safety analysis and
upgrade safety systems
25Injector Upgrade
- Largest upgrade to accelerator since initial ops
- - components installed Fall 06/Spring 07
shutdowns - - operating now with new equipment
- - problems with control of booster bend power
supply has delayed operation at full energy - - full energy operation by end of 2007
New RF System
New Power Supplies
Upgraded Pulsed Magnet Systems
New Controls
26Additional Lattice Upgrade
- Brightness increases possible with modified
lattice structure - 3x brightness for central bend and Superbend
beamlines - 2x brightness for soft x-ray beamlines
- emittance as low as any existing light source
- Additional benefits short pulses
- 500 MHz ps pulses (at reduced currents)
- Coherent THz radiation
- Relatively inexpensive, low risk, short
installation time - Hear more at the Friday Workshop
- Beyond Top-off Opportunities for Improved ALS
Performance
27Controlling Matter and Energy Five Challenges
for Science and the Imagination
Long Term Planning Next Generation Sources
- Graham Fleming and Mark Ratner
- September 20, 2007
Hear more at Joint ALS-MF Science Highlights
145 Grand Challenges for Basic Energy
Sciences Graham Fleming, Berkeley Lab
28Long Term Planning Next Generation Sources
LBNL workshops on Science for a New Class of
Soft X-ray Light Sources
29Scientific highlights
For more highlights see
http//www-als.lbl.gov/als/actrep/
30Photoemission Electron Microscopy PEEM
ALS PEEM allows measurements of composition,
chemistry, and magnetic properties of surfaces
and thin films at nanometer spatial and
picosecond temporal resolution
X-rays with polarization control
Electron optic column
CCD
Sample
Examples
Sub 100 nm size magnetic pillars in a
ferroelectric matrix T. Zhao et al., Appl. Phys.
Lett. 90, 123104 (2007)
Protein adsorption on two segregated polymers C.
Morin et al., JESRP 137-140, 785 (2004).
Magnetic phase transition in Fe Y. Wu et al.,
Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 117205 (2004)
Vortex dynamics S.B. Choe et al., ALS, Science
304, 420 (2004)
31PEEM Example Multiferroics
BiFeO3 Room-temperature ferroelectric
antiferromagnet
Piezo-Force Microscopy Ferroelectricity
Photoemission Electron Microscopy using X-ray
Linear Dichroism Magnetism, Lattice Distortion
Shows coupling between ferroelectric magnetic
structure Temperature-dependent data implies 50
of contrast is of magnetic origin
32PEEM Facility Upgrades
PEEM 2 PEEM 2.5 PEEM 3
(aberration 1997 Now 2008
corrected) Operating resolution 50 nm
25 nm 5 nm Beamline Bending
magnet Elliptical Polarized Insertion Device
BL 7.3.1 BL 11.0.1 (flux
density x 1000) Energy resolution 1000 gt3000 Po
larization options Left/right/linear Full
polarization control Sample environment gt RT
50 K - 1000
K Operation Manual Fully
motorized - automated sample transfer
PEEM2 end station
33PEEM 2.5 on EPU Beamline 11.0.1
Resolution Test sample from CXRO
First Experiments on PEEM2.5 April 2007
Low temperature magnetic images _at_ 130 K of
LaMnO3 T.Tyson, NJ Inst. of Techn.
PEEM 2 600 sec exposure, 50 nm
resolution PEEM 2.5 20 sec exposure, 25 nm
resolution PEEM 3 (2008) with aberration
correction 5 nm resolution
34Substrate induced band-gap in graphene
graphene
graphene
substrate- SiC
p
p
EED
p
p
Semiconducting graphene enabling next
generation nanoelectronics
S. Y. Zhou et al. Nature Materials (2007),
Nature Physics (2006)
Lanzaras group UCB, LBNL
35Nanoswitch in graphene
A bilayer of graphene can switch 108 A/cm2 in
less than 1 nm thickness
gapped
ungapped
ARPES measurements validated concept by
demonstrating control over the current-carrying
electronic states.
Ohta et al, Science 313,951-954 (2006) Data taken
at the Electronic Structure Factory, BL7,
Rotenberg et al
36 Steps Toward Hydrogen Vehicles
- Characterize new materials
- Carbon nanotubes for storing hydrogen. safely,
efficiently and compactly - DOE Freedom CAR program has set the goal of a
material that can hold 6 of the total weight in
hydrogen by the year 2010 - Theoretical calculations indicate nanotubes may
exceed these goals substantially
Nikitin et. al., Phys Rev Lett. 95, 225507 (2005)
Funded by DOE, NSF and Global Climate and Energy
Project (alliance of scientific researchers and
leading companies in the private sector,
including ExxonMobil, General Electric and
Schlumberger)
37Fuel Cell - Schematic
LOAD
e-
e-
Cathode
Anode
O2
H2
H2O
Proton Exchange Membrane
38Breakthrough Research For Fuel Cells
Hydrogen powered fuel cells for automotives are
clean and efficient Discovery of a unique
platinum-nickel alloy represents a breakthrough
in catalyst research It is 90 times more active
than state-of-the-art platinum catalysts
currently used
Argonne and Berkeley National Labs U. South
Carolina
(top) In standard Pt catalysts absorption of
oxygen on the surface is hindered by the binding
of other molecules, such as OH. (bottom) The
nickel atoms change the surface properties such
that OH cannot bind as well, leaving room for
oxygen.
Science 315 Jan 2007
39Photoemission Research at Beamline 12.0.1
La2-2xSr12xMn2O7 NaxCoO2
Exploring electronic structure of doped oxide
perovskites Materials tailored to enhance their
rare properties
A. Colossal magneto-resistance materials
A local metallic state in globally insulating
La1.24Sr1.76Mn2O7 well above the metal insulator
transition
Z. Sun et al., Nature Phys 3, 248 Phys. Rev.
Lett. 97, 056401
B. High thermopower Cobalt Oxides
Complete d-band dispersion relation in Sodium
doped Cobalt Oxides NaxCoO2
D. Qian et al.,Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 46407 96,
216405 97, 186405
40Photoelectron Emission from Diamondoid-thiol SAMs
Self Assembled Monolayer
Diamondoid (C22H26-SH) (5 X more effective
than diamond)
Diamond
Diamondoid
-
- Potential Applications
- Flat Panel Displays
- Electron Microscopy / lithography
- Photocathode for next generation Free Electron
Laser - Robust Molecules
- Further studies
- needed for stabilizing
- diamondoid/metal
- interfaces.
ALS hn 55eV
Wanli Yang, Zahid Hussain, ZhiXun Shen, et al.
Science 2007
41Size Dependent Electronic Structure of Co
Nanoparticles with Ligand Molecules
Cell for photon-in/photon-out studies of clusters
in gas or liquid environments
Photon-out
Photon-in
100 nm thick SiN membrane
Nanoparticle suspension
FPM O-ring
RIXS _at_ hv 778.4 eV
Cobalt 2p3/2 XAS
Energy Loss (eV)
Cluster size
Bulk
Co
9 nm
6 nm
5 nm
4 nm
e-
3 nm
Co
Co to Ligand transition
d-d transition
Co2p3/2 to ligand transition
Co3d to ligand transition
Nano Letters 7, 1919 (2007)
- Surfactant Oleic Acid, C18H34O2
CH3(CH2)7CHCH(CH2)7CO2H - Solvent Dichlorobenzene, C6H4Cl2
P. Alivisatos M. Salmeron (MF), J. Guo (BL7,
ALS)
42Magnetization Dynamics of Fe/Gd using x-ray
streak camera at BL11 and BL4
Streaked XMCD Image
Fully demagnetize Fe/Gd in 1-2 ps
A. Bartel, et al App.Phys.Lett., 90(2007)162503
43ALS Dectector Program Why ALS? Why LBNL?
Needs
Microsystems Laboratory
2000 Workshop
- Demonstrated unique capabilities for complex
imaging systems (ATLAS, SNAP, ) - Microelectronics
- Solid state detectors
- Leverage and propagate expertise in different
areas (high-energy physics, nuclear physics,
materials science and biology) via Engineering
Division - Timely BES Detector and Accelerator RD
Initiative - Detector needs? Please participate in the
Detector Workshop
2005 Workshop
ESRF detectors are generally recognised as the
weak link in the modern use of SR
44Detector Challenges
Fast imaging with high dynamic range What weve
done Develop a Fast CCD (parallel readout) with
companion readout chip
Fast imaging with high dynamic range What were
doing RD on Silicon-on-Insulator pixels
0.15 µm SOI 10 µm pixels
(LDRD FY08- 250k/yr)
30 µm pixels, 5 ms to read out 1 MPix visible
light or direct detection (?10 keV)
What we plan to do Time-stamping pixels
(speckle) RD on avalanche photodiode arrays
(LDRD FY05-07 540k/yr)
45New Infrared Beamline 5.4
- funded in 2007 by DOE/BER
- currently being engineered
- emphasis is Biology Environmental Science
- FTIR Spectromicroscopy
- ALS, Life Science, Earth Science Physical
Biosciences Divisions
46New Infrared Beamline 5.4
47Conclusions
- We are grateful to DOE for continuing support
- The ALS continues to grow and will remain a
premier facility - We have ambitious plans for both renewal and
upgrades - - Planning for Sector 7 (COSMIC and
MAESTRO) moving forward - Safety, staffing, and frontier science remain our
top priorities - The ALS and its user community should be very
proud