Selected FY 2006 Scientific
Highlights/Accomplishments
Materials
Sciences and Engineering Subprogram
Nanofluidic transistor.
Imagine a valve to precisely control the flow
of liquids but with dimensions so tiny that only one
molecule at a time can pass through it. Controlled flow of
ions in a liquid was recently demonstrated through very
small nanochannels barely large enough to pass large
molecules. Named “nanofluidic transistors,” the nanochannel
assembly functions in a way similar to ordinary transistors
where the flow of electrons can be regulated by applying a
voltage. Demonstrations were carried out on a 35-nanometer
channel constructed between two silicon dioxide plates; the
channel was filled with water and potassium chloride salt.
The flow of potassium ions could be completely stopped by
applying an electric current across the channel. The
regulation of the flow (or current) of charged molecules was
also demonstrated. This exciting discovery now makes
possible detection and separation of individual molecules in
a fluid. Among the important implications of this discovery
are advanced nanoscale chemical analysis with extreme
sensitivity and the capability of sorting individual
molecules.
Unexpected spontaneous
reversal of magnetization in nanoscaled structures.
New and unexpected magnetic phenomena have
been discovered in ultrathin bilayers of ferromagnetic and
antiferromagnetic films. Ferromagnetic materials (e.g.,
iron) have a positive magnetization due to the alignment of
the magnetic moments. Antiferromagnet materials (e.g.,
nickel oxide) have no net magnetization due to the
anti-parallel alignment of the magnetic moments. In bulk
magnetic materials, regions of aligned magnetic moments,
termed magnetic domains, are expected to align with an
external applied magnetic field. The magnetic strength is
determined by the degree of alignment of the magnetic
domains. In contrast to naturally occurring bulk magnetic
materials, an ultrathin ferromagnetic layer in close contact
with an antiferromagnetic layer will spontaneously align
opposite to the applied magnetic field upon cooling. The
close proximity of the two different layers also results in
an increase in magnetic strength. The ability to control and
detect the magnetic alignment in ultrathin magnetic
materials could lead to new concepts in computer data
storage design. The fundamental understanding of the
unexpected phenomena may also influence future research and
development of magnetic based biological and chemical
sensors.
Nano-electronic
hydrodynamics and turbulence.
Electrons moving across a nanometer-sized
wire have been found to behave hydrodynamically, i.e., like
a liquid flowing from one bucket to another through a small
opening. This behavior is exactly contrary to expectations
from a quantum mechanical prediction, and it has prompted
theoretical predictions of new phenomena. Most striking is
the prediction of possible turbulent electrical transport
with eddy currents in nanoscale conductors that could
seriously limit current flow. Such turbulent currents could
then lead to extremely high electronic temperatures due to
the “friction” of the electrons as they move against each
other, resulting in potential premature failure at much
reduced current flow. Experiments are being carried out to
test these theoretical developments.
Using bioinspired
methods to synthesize and assemble materials.
Biological systems are renowned for
synthesizing inorganic materials under mild conditions and
assembling them into exquisitely shaped structures with high
precision and control. Recently, by emulating the underlying
chemistry and approaches of biology, several inorganic
materials have been synthesized under mild conditions (room
temperature, neutral pH, etc.), with a potential for
significant energy savings in their large-scale manufacture.
Some of the materials synthesized include semiconducting
titanium dioxide, gallium oxide, and zinc oxide for solar
energy conversion; ferroelectric barium titanate
nanoparticles for energy storage; magnetite nanoparticles
for ultra-high density magnetic information storage; and
nanocrystalline palladium for hydrogen storage. Furthermore,
by exploiting the ability of biological macromolecules
(e.g., DNA, proteins, viruses) to self-assemble into large,
well-defined structures and to nucleate the growth of
inorganic materials, researchers have shown that complex
electronic circuit elements and large ordered arrays of
nanoparticles can be assembled with a precision that far
exceeds the current top-down fabrication capabilities.
Unveiling the
superconductor mystery.
Understanding the phenomena of
superconductivity and its mechanism has been among the most
challenging issues facing the condensed matter and materials
physics communities. The mystery of superconductivity is
being tackled by a concerted effort, coupling synthesis and
characterization with theory, modeling, and simulation. The
recent discovery of superconductivity in actinide- and
boron-containing materials indicates superconductivity may
exist in many material systems yet to be discovered. The
search for new materials is augmented by sophisticated
techniques to modify the electronic properties of known
superconducting materials, both chemically and electrically.
Advances in new characterization tools, including proximal
probes, have made possible the discovery of new phenomena,
including competing phases within the superconducting phase.
First principles calculations assisted by generalized
density functional theory enabled accurate predictions of
the electronic structure of superconducting materials. When
coupled to an electron pairing mechanism, numerical models
are being developed to predict the superconducting
transition temperature as a first step towards a priori
design of new superconductors.
Chemical
Sciences, Geosciences, and Energy Biosciences Subprogram
Measuring the
ultrafast motion within a molecule using its own electrons.
Modern ultrafast lasers make it possible, in principle, to
follow in real time the motions of the atoms that comprise a
molecule. However, optical lasers are only indirect probes
of atomic motion. This problem will be alleviated with the
advent of the world’s first x-ray free-electron laser, the
Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS), since x-rays allow
direct tracking of atomic positions. Until the LCLS is
available, optical laser pulses can be used in clever ways
to track atomic motion in molecules. In one recently
demonstrated example, the molecule’s own electrons are used
as the probe of atomic motion in a highly excited molecule.
The electric field from an intense, optical laser pulse
initially pulls electrons away from the molecule and then
accelerates them back toward it. The highly energetic
electrons scatter from the molecule. Rather than measure the
scattered electrons, as might be done in an electron
diffraction experiment, the new method exploits another
phenomenon that is particularly sensitive to atomic motion.
When the electrons re-collide with the molecule, they emit
x-ray radiation in a process known as high-harmonic
generation (HHG), and it is these x-rays that are detected.
The wavelength of the re-colliding electrons is comparable
to distances between atoms in a molecule; thus, the HHG
x-rays emitted are highly sensitive to atomic motion within
the molecule. This new method shows great promise as a way
of imaging energetic molecules undergoing ultrafast
structural transformations, including the fundamental action
of all of chemistry, and the making and breaking of chemical
bonds.
Sunlight-driven
transformation of carbon dioxide into methanol. The
first step in the chemical transformation of carbon dioxide
into a transportable fuel such as methanol involves the
interaction of light with a catalyst in a process known as
photocatalysis. It has long been known that the
photocatalytic formation of methanol from carbon dioxide can
be initiated by high-energy ultraviolet radiation. Recent
work has demonstrated that the critical first reaction that
splits carbon dioxide into carbon monoxide and a free oxygen
atom can also be triggered with visible light. This advance
makes it feasible to consider harnessing sunlight to drive
the photocatalytic production of methanol from carbon
dioxide. The key to the new advance is to perform the
initial photocatalytic reaction on the walls of the
nanometer-sized channels of a porous silica solid through
the excitation by visible light of a bimetallic catalyst.
The energy from the absorption of light causes an electron
to transfer from one metal in the catalyst to the other and
subsequently activates the gaseous carbon dioxide to
eliminate an oxygen atom to yield the carbon monoxide
product. Various combinations of metals are now being
explored with the goal of designing a complete and
sustainable system to produce methanol.
Catalytic synthesis
of alternative fuels and chemicals. Current
manufacturing technologies for fuels and chemicals are often
inefficient. The need to dramatically improve efficiency in
fuel and chemical production is motivating the search for
new chemical pathways using new catalysts tailored to guide
chemical reactions with precision toward a selected product
without wasteful sub-products. Recent approaches enlist
different catalysts to cooperate in parallel to transform
molecular intermediates. Sometimes referred to as tandem
catalysis, this approach can potentially yield ultrahigh
selectivity. An example is the venerable Fisher-Tropsch
production of diesel fuel from carbon monoxide and hydrogen.
Model catalysts for this polymerization reaction are
typically unselective and yield a mixture of hydrocarbons or
alcohols with carbon-chain lengths varying over a wide
range. For minimum energy consumption and maximum yield, the
ideal process should provide a very narrow carbon-chain
range. Two recent advances may rejuvenate the Fisher-Tropsch
process: the discovery of efficient metathesis catalysts,
which led to the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2006, and the
selective activation of carbon-hydrogen bonds. Two catalysts
are necessary to carry out these two very different
functions simultaneously on the same growing polymers. The
carbon-hydrogen activation catalyst limits the yield of
low-end hydrocarbons, and the metathesis polymerization
catalyst simultaneously controls the high-end hydrocarbons.
This can potentially lead to an ideal diesel-oil without the
need for energy-intensive separations. This new tandem
catalysis application is being followed intensely by
researchers worldwide for its potential to revolutionize the
science of alternative fuels and chemicals synthesis.
Carrier
multiplication: a possible revolutionary step toward highly
efficient solar cells. In a normal solar cell, a single
photon from the sun is converted into a single carrier of
electrical current (an electron-hole pair) in a bulk crystal
material called a semiconductor. This process is inherently
inefficient because much of the energy of the solar photon
is wasted as excess heat in the semiconductor. Recent
experiments on the interaction of photons with nanocrystalline samples of semiconductors have demonstrated
a remarkable effect, known as carrier multiplication, in
which a single photon creates multiple charge carriers.
Recent work has demonstrated that as many as seven charge
carriers can be created with a single photon and that the
process is universal, i.e., it occurs in all types of
nanocrystalline semiconductors. These new results suggest
that nanoscale confinement plays an important role in the
carrier multiplication mechanism, which is now thought to be
an instantaneous excitation of multiple electrons by a
single photon. Critical issues must be addressed before an
operational solar cell based on carrier multiplication can
be created, such as separating and harvesting the charge
carriers to create electrical current. However, present
estimates of the conversion efficiency for a solar cell
based on carrier multiplication are as high as 50 percent,
which is about twice that of the best solar cell in current
operation. Doubling solar cell conversion efficiency would
represent a revolutionary advance in our ability to harness
renewable energy from the sun.
Visualizing
chemistry: the promise of advanced chemical imaging. The
emerging possibility of “chemical imaging” is transforming
the way scientists follow the chemical transformation of
molecules on surfaces, within cells, or immersed in other
complex environments. Chemical imaging is the term given to
a set of experimental techniques that use photon beams,
electron beams, or proximal electromechanical probes to
track molecules in two- or three-dimensional space and real
time, while keeping track of chemical identity and even
molecular structure. In the ideal limit, chemical imaging
means nanometer spatial resolution, femtosecond temporal
resolution, and “fingerprint” recognition of the molecular
mass and structure. As a recent example, researchers are
using focused laser beams (space and time information)
coupled with mass spectrometry (chemical identification), to
track specific metabolites in functioning cells.
Multiplexing the mass information allows the simultaneous
mapping of several species. Understanding the metabolic
transformation of important biomolecules in cells is the
first step toward influencing them in service of improved
biochemical processes. Other examples include the use of
chemical imaging to examine single-site catalysts as they
influence reactions on surfaces and light-harvesting
“antenna molecules” that are key participants in
photochemical charge-transfer processes.
Selected FY 2006 Facility Accomplishments
§
The Advanced Light Source (ALS) at LBNL
Experiments begin on new femtosecond X-ray beamline.
Experiments using ultrafast soft x-rays began in FY 2006 on
Beamline 6.0.1.2. High-resolution x-ray spectroscopy and
diffraction at photon energies from 150–1800 eV are now
possible using the new, high-brightness, in-vacuum-undulator
beamline, which increases the flux by a factor of 1000
relative to its predecessor. Beamline 6.0.1, a complementary
hard x-ray beamline using the same insertion device and
extending the photon energy available to users from 2.2–10
keV, was also installed, and its commissioning was begun. In
the first measurements, soft x-ray pulses of 200-femtosecond
duration were used to study phase transitions in vanadium
oxide.
§
The Advanced Photon Source (APS) at ANL
Record nanofocusing with an innovative lens design. A new device, the Multilayer Laue Lens,
developed at Argonne National Laboratory jointly between the
APS and the Center for Nanoscale Materials, has set a
world's record for line size resolution produced with a hard
x-ray beam. The wafer from which the device was made won a
2005 R&D 100 award, given to the world's top 100 scientific
and technological innovations. Enhancements to the device
have now increased its ability to focus the x-rays with an
energy level of 19.5 keV to less than 20 nanometers. Using
the lens, researchers will be able to visualize
three-dimensional electronic circuit boards to find circuit
errors, map impurities in biological or environmental
samples at the nanometer scale, or analyze samples inside
high-pressure or high-temperature cells because hard x-rays,
unlike soft x-rays, are able to penetrate container walls.
This device has potential for a multitude of uses, including
possible incorporation at the nanoprobe beamline at APS
associated with the Center for Nanoscale Materials facility.
§
The National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS) at BNL
Novel undulator design developed and installed.
A custom-designed, cryogenic-ready, in-vacuum, miniature-gap
hybrid undulator has been installed in the X25 straight
section of the NSLS x-ray ring. The new radiation source,
the first of its kind, will be an order of magnitude
brighter than the original wiggler. By cooling the magnet
array, this insertion device can have a higher magnetic
field and a higher radiation resistance, resulting in a
larger photon energy tuning range. Consequently, unlike
previous miniature-gap undulators in use at the NSLS, this
new undulator will be continuously tunable from 2 to 20 keV
by employing all harmonics up through the 9th. This upgrade
will provide significant benefits to the macromolecular
crystallography program at the NSLS. This technology will be
useful to all medium-energy storage rings in the world.
§
The Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory (SSRL) at SLAC
Operation at high current of 500 mA.
The SPEAR3 accelerator reached its design current of 500 mA
for the first time during a special run last year. Under
similar test conditions, a selected beam line (BL 6) was
subsequently operated successfully at 500 mA to test the
performance of newly designed optical components, including
the liquid-nitrogen-cooled double crystal monochromator. The
success of this test paves the way for commissioning the
other beam lines. The SPEAR3 accelerator received permission
to operate routinely at 500 mA following an extensive
accelerator readiness review. Authorization for operating
beam lines for users at 500 mA is expected during the
FY 2007 user run, when selected time periods will be
allocated to commission, characterize, and operate beam
lines at high current. SSRL is planning to operate full time
with high current in FY 2008.
§
The Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) at ORNL
Commissioning and initial instrument results. Construction and commissioning of the Spallation Neutron
Source, an accelerator-based neutron source that will
provide the most intense pulsed neutron beams in the world
for scientific research and industrial development, was
completed, and the facility began operations in late
FY 2006. The backscattering spectrometer that is part of the
initial suite of instruments has unprecedented dynamic range
and an energy resolution of better than 3 x 10-6
electron volts. Initial operation of this hardware involved
test measurements of excitations in picoline (a
hydrocarbon), which confirmed the performance of the
instrument.
Selected FY 2005 Scientific
Highlights/Accomplishments
Materials
Sciences and Engineering Subprogram
Synchrotron X-Rays Demonstrate Nanoscale Ferroelectricity.
Films only a few atoms thick have been made that retain the
controllable electric polarization needed for next
generation nanoscale devices. Such ultrathin ferroelectric
films have the potential to revolutionize future
electronics, sensors, and actuators. Previous studies
suggested that, as devices are miniaturized, they lose their
ferroelectric character. These studies showed that
ferroelectricity persists in films only 6 atoms thick. This
landmark success was achieved using a unique instrument to
observe thin film growth with high intensity x-rays from the
Advanced Photon Source. X-rays reveal in real time the film
structure as it grows, atomic layer by atomic layer. The
in-situ x-ray techniques developed for this study can now be
used to understand the synthesis and environmental
interactions of other complex materials, thus addressing a
wide range of energy-related challenges.
A Superconductor that Tolerates Magnetic Fields.
One of the biggest obstacles to the practical use of
superconductors is the motion of magnetic flux due to an
electric current in a superconductor. This motion of
magnetic flux reduced the superconducting properties. A
large research effort has gone into finding ways to prevent
energy loss occurring from the movement of magnetic flux in
copper oxide high temperature superconductors. It has been
found that the magnetic flux in certain magnesium diboride
films is intrinsically motionless, or “frozen,” in applied
magnetic fields up to 14 Tesla. Such a complete apathy to an
applied magnetic field has never been seen before in any
other superconductor. While the theoretical explanation for
this behavior has eluded scientists, the experimental
finding has drawn a lot of attention. This behavior may make
it possible to fabricate superconducting wire that can carry
very large electric currents.
Using Electron Spin, not
Electron Charge, to Carry Information. Today’s computers are
based on resistive circuitry using the movement of charged
electrons. The resistance generates heat, and the removal of
this heat is a fundamental limiting factor in creating the
next generation of ultra small and ultra fast circuit
elements. In a remarkable discovery, theorists have
determined that in certain materials a spin current can be
created with the application of a suitably oriented electric
field, with no dissipation of energy. The spin current could
potentially be used to carry out the same logic operations
with no energy loss. This has been verified recently with
experiments on gallium arsenide. This discovery may lead to
computers with much greater capabilities including speed and
capacity due to smaller circuit elements and with a
significant reduction in energy loss.
Plutonium Helps Understand Superconductivity’s Mysteries.
Magnetic resonance studies of the fundamental mechanism
responsible for superconductivity in PuCoGa5
reveal strong similarities to the high-Tc copper
oxide materials. These results confirm earlier theories that
this unique family of plutonium superconductors is nearly
magnetic. This is a new class of superconducting materials
and forms a conceptual bridge between two families of
magnetically mediated superconductors, the heavy fermion
metals and the copper oxides. The discovery of additional
classes of superconducting materials enhances our ability to
understand the mechanisms responsible for high temperature
superconductivity.
Ultrafast Studies of Nanocrystals.
The fastest phase transition between nanocrystal structures
ever recorded has been observed by ultrafast laser
techniques. The reversible structural change in nanocrystals
of vanadium dioxide switches the material from a
semiconductor to a metallic phase, increasing the electrical
conductivity by a factor of 100-10,000 depending on
nanoparticle size. Correspondingly large changes from
optical transparency to high reflectivity occur at the same
time. Lasers with pulses as short as one ten-trillionth of a
second were used to track the phase change in vanadium
dioxide nanoparticles. This discovery may be key to possible
applications requiring extremely rapid switching from
transparent to reflective states. These include protective
overlayers for sensitive infrared detectors, nonlinear
optical switches, fiber-optic pressure sensors, and
electrically or optically triggered transistors that could
switch hundreds of times faster than conventional silicon
devices.
First Direct Observations of Quasiparticles.
Quasiparticles provide a convenient simplification to
describe the behavior of electrons in a superconductor. A
quasiparticle can be thought of as a single particle moving
through a system, surrounded by a cloud of other particles
either pushed away or dragged along by its motion. Prior
investigations of their dynamics have been indirect. Through
the use of a new optical technique it was possible to
perform the first direct study of the dynamics of
quasiparticles in a superconductor. It was discovered that
the quasiparticles can propagate remarkably far, several
hundreds of nanometers. Knowledge of the dynamics of
quasiparticles, specifically their rates of diffusion,
scattering, trapping, and recombination, is critical for the
both the applications and fundamental understanding of
superconductivity.
Confining Electrons in New
Two-dimensional Materials. Transition metal oxides,
like semiconductors, are materials that confine electrons to
a plane. It may now be possible to construct near-perfect
layered materials of two perovskite structured materials. It
has been shown through computational models that a single
layer of LaTiO3 in SrTiO3 will serve
as an electron donor and positive charge layer to retain
those electrons in a thin layer as a two-dimensional
electron gas (2DEG). Electrons behaving like a 2DEG appear
to be an exotic phenomenon, but they are not. Many
semiconductor electronic devices operate by creating just
such a gas by an applied electric field inducing a thin
conducting region at an interface—the field effect
transistor being the prime example. Such thin electron
layers have become a valuable tool for scientists studying
the ways in which electrons organize their collective
behavior. By expanding the materials available to create
2DEGs, new, more diverse opportunities have been created to
expand our knowledge of electronic behavior that in turn can
produce new applications.
Inexpensive Route to Solar Cells Using Nanomaterials.
New and novel semiconductor nanocrystal-polymer solar cells
with surprisingly high efficiencies have been fabricated. In
a solar cell, the conversion of light energy to electrical
current occurs at the nanometer scale. Thus the development
of methods for controlling materials on this scale creates
new opportunities for more advanced solar cells. These
advances are required because, although solar cells based on
silicon and gallium arsenide have achieved high efficiencies
and have found a variety of markets, more widespread
applications remain limited by their high cost of
production. These new cells are formed in an inherently
inexpensive process from a colloidal solution of
semiconductor nanocrystals in a semiconducting polymer. The
unique features of nanosized objects are exploited to
optimize the cell performance by controlling the shape of
the nanocrystals. The performance of the new cells already
rivals that of the best polymer-based devices. While the
power conversion efficiency is still below that of current
amorphous silicon and single crystal devices, there are
opportunities to increase performance further by adding
additional nanocrystal components to capture more of the
solar spectrum. Furthermore, the same methods can be
extended to address other optoelectronic applications, such
as photodetectors and light emitting diodes.
Predicting Magnetism in
Nanomaterials. As recording media and sensors become smaller
and ever-denser, it is increasingly important to control
magnetism in nanostructures. But the physical properties of
magnetic nanostructures are linked in complex ways and are
difficult to predict, much less control. In this work, the
magnetic properties of a cobalt nano-wire next to a platinum
surface step were predicted from first-principles. The
results are in perfect agreement with experiment and show
the importance of a proper quantum mechanical description of
the interplay of different magnetic phenomena. This work,
based on newly developed quantum mechanical models
implemented on high-performance computers, shows that
accurate predictions can be made for a nanostructure
comprised of a few hundred atoms. With continued theoretical
development and more powerful computers, this paves the way
toward prediction and control of more complex and useful
magnetic structures.
Explaining Materials Deformation Mechanisms from
Atomic-scale Measurements.
Using the world's most advanced electron microscope, the
first direct observations of atomic details in complex
crystalline dislocation cores revealed the atomic mechanisms
underlying the deformation of intermetallic compounds with
complex crystal structures. It was discovered that the
diffusion of chromium atoms into and out of the crystal
dislocation cores hinders dislocation motion in Laves-phase
Cr2Hf, a model intermetallic compound, thus
providing a clue as to the origin of the brittleness and
poor low temperature ductility of these intermetallic
alloys. The poor low-temperature ductility of these
intermetallic alloys has prevented their fabrication and use
for decades. Some of the most attractive high-strength
alloys for advanced high-temperature fission and fossil
energy conversion applications possess similar complicated
atomic configurations and lack the low-temperature ductility
required for their fabricated by conventional cold
deformation processes without crack formation. This
discovery provides new atomistic insight into the behavior
of crystal dislocations in complex intermetallic compounds
necessary to design new fabricable alloys with the required
strength at high service temperatures.
Discovery of Mechanism of Surface Mass Transport.
Researchers have discovered that trace concentrations of
sulfur can enhance the rate of mass transport on copper
surfaces by many orders of magnitude and have established
the atomic scale mechanism by which this enhancement occurs.
This discovery was enabled by low-energy electron microscopy
measurements of the motion of singe-atom-high steps on
copper exposed to calibrated doses of sulfur. By comparing
observations of the motion of these steps with theoretical
predictions based on calculations of the electronic
structure of the surface, this research established that
surface mass transport is catalyzed by the formation of a
large number of mobile copper sulfide clusters. Such highly
mobile clusters are believed to be a common feature of
impure surfaces. The enhanced mass transport allows the
formation of much flatter and more defect free surfaces.
This discovery provides insight to many previous puzzling
observations of anomalous surface mass transport. It is an
important advance towards the capability to control the
nanoscale morphology of surfaces, a critical necessity for
nanoscale applications.
Superior Iron-based Alloys and
Steels.
Fundamental laws of alloying
coupled with advanced microanalytical characterization led
to the discovery that yttrium containing iron-based alloys
substantially enhance the stability of the amorphous
(non-crystalline) state. Two technical implications are: (1)
large bulk physical dimensions of this class of amorphous
alloys can be made and (2) this understanding provides a new
direction for designing bulk amorphous metals for structural
and functional applications. Bulk tool steel was fabricated
that was twice as hard as conventional tool steel. These
achievements are milestones in the science of amorphous
metals and the design of functional complex metallic alloys.
Even more important, this research has demonstrated that
microalloying is a new approach for designing bulk amorphous
alloys. Their unique atomic configurations and the absence
of a crystalline lattice allow bulk amorphous metals to
outperform their crystalline counterparts by exhibiting
superior magnetic and mechanical properties and corrosion
resistance coupled with high thermal stability.
Fracture Resistance Mechanism in
Ceramics.
Structural ceramics are complex
structures of micron-sized matrix grains separated by a
nanoscale intergranular film. For many years it has been
observed that certain additives, specifically rare-earth
atoms, influence the ceramic’s fracture resistance. But
detailed information about how this effect is achieved and
how it can be controlled had been inaccessible with current
diagnostic capabilities. Now, new scanning transmission
electron microscopy (STEM) and associated chemical analysis
techniques have revealed the local atomic structure and
bonding characteristics of the grain boundaries with close
to atomic resolution. Applied to silicon nitride ceramics
containing a range of rare-earth additives, these methods
together have revealed how each atom bonds at a specific
location depending on atom radius, electronic configuration
and the presence of oxygen; this variation in bonding sites
can be directly related to the fracture resistance or
toughness of the ceramic.
Better Protective Coatings.
Previously unattainable insight into stress development and
failure mechanisms in thermally grown surface oxides on
metal alloys has been obtained by a new in-situ synchrotron
x-ray technique. This technique enabled, for the first time,
the uncoupling and isolation of mechanical stress
contributions from oxide growth, phase transformations, and
creep deformation processes. For pure thermally-grown
alumina, steady state oxidation creates compressive
stresses. However, when certain “reactive elements” are
added to the alloy, it is found that tensile stresses
develop instead. Maximizing the tensile offset can lead to
dramatic improvement in performance of a protective oxide. A
10 percent shift in the tensile direction can translate to a
40 percent improvement in operating lifetime. Better control
of early stage oxidation leads to thinner, and thus longer
lifetime protective oxides by speeding the transformation to
a stable oxide structure. These results underpin future
alloy development for high-temperature nuclear and fossil
energy generation technologies and more fuel efficient jet
engine applications where operating lifetime has great
economic value.
New Composite Materials that
Respond to Magnetic Fields. Magnetic-field-structured composites are a novel class
of material in which magnetic particles, dispersed in a
polymerizable medium, are organized into chains and other
structures by magnetic fields while the polymer solidifies.
These chains of particles can be electrically conductive,
and this electrical conductivity can be extremely sensitive
to temperature, pressure, and chemical vapors that penetrate
and swell the polymer.
In the present work it was
demonstrated that even modest magnetic fields produced by
simple copper coils cause these materials to contract
significantly, like artificial muscles. This contraction was
found to be accompanied by an enormous, 50,000-fold increase
in electrical conductivity. This is by far the largest
“magnetoresistance” effect ever observed in such modest
magnetic fields and paves the way to using magnetic fields
to control heat and current transport in micro and nano
machines, and to tailoring the sensing response of these
materials.
The “Giant Proximity Effect.”
The reproducible confirmation of the existence of a Giant
Proximity Effect (GPE) has challenged experimentalists for
over a decade. In the traditional Proximity Effect (PE), a
very thin layer of normal metal, when placed between two
thicker superconductor slices, behaves like a
superconductor. That is, superconducting or paired electrons
retain phase coherence even while separated by the normal
metal gap. In the newly discovered GPE, the normal-metal
barrier layer is as much as 100 times thicker than in the PE
case, a result that stands outside of any present theories.
In addition to challenging the theoretical community and
providing new clues to the causes of high-temperature
superconductivity, this result may lead to new advances in
superconducting circuitry as it is relatively easy to
prepare reproducible thick barriers which will improve
device uniformity and yield.
World’s Smallest Nanomotor.
The smallest synthetic motor—a 300 nanometer gold rotor on a
carbon nanotube shaft—has been demonstrated. This
“nanomotor” continues the dramatic advances in the
miniaturization of electromechanical devices and is a key
step in the realization of practical synthetic
nanometer-scale electromechanical systems (NEMS). In initial
testing, the rotor rotated on its nanotube shaft for
thousands of cycles with no apparent wear or degradation in
performance. This is attributed to the unique low-friction
characteristics of the carbon nanotube shaft. The new motor
design has significant potential for NEMS applications. It
should be possible to fabricate arrays of orientationally-ordered
nanotube-based actuators on substrates by using alignment
techniques.
Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence in Liquid Metals.
Application of a strong magnetic field can completely change
flow characteristics of an electrically conducting fluid.
The transformation may occur in processes ranging from the
generation of sunspots to crystal growth. One particular
aspect of this phenomenon, the damping of flow variations
along the magnetic field lines and the corresponding
development of elongated or even two-dimensional flow
structures, affect nearly all aspects of turbulent flow
behavior, including heat transfer and mixing. In a series of
high resolution numerical experiments it has been shown that
the anisotropy of flow (or directionality of flow) patterns
is a robust universal feature determined primarily by the
strength of the magnetic field, conductivity, and kinetic
energy. Furthermore, the elongation of flow patterns is
approximately the same for flow structures of different
size. This property can be effectively employed for accurate
modeling of magnetohydrodynamic turbulence. The results of
the work are relevant to technological applications, such as
continuous casting of steel, crystal growth, and development
of lithium breeding blankets for fusion reactors.
Nanoparticle
Catalysts.
Methods were developed for depositing and stabilizing
nanometer-sized platinum group metals, including palladium
and rhodium, on surfaces of carbon nanotubes in
supercritical fluid carbon dioxide. Uniformly distributed
monometallic and bimetallic nanoparticles with narrow size
distributions are formed on the surfaces of the carbon
nanotubes. The carbon nanotube-supported palladium and
rhodium nanoparticles demonstrated improved performance over
commercial carbon-based palladium and rhodium catalysts for
hydrogenation of olefins and aromatic compounds. These new
nanoscale catalysts are currently being tested as
electrocatalysts for low temperature polymer electrode fuel
cells applications.
Chemical
Sciences, Geosciences, and Energy Biosciences Subprogram
Timing the
World’s Shortest X-Ray Pulses.
Light sources
based on particle accelerators, such as the Linac Coherent
Light Source (LCLS), will revolutionize x-ray science due to
their unprecedented brightness and extremely short pulse
duration. To take full advantage of x-ray pulses that last
only a few femtoseconds (10-15 seconds), they
must be timed relative to equally short pulses from an
optical laser. Such measurements are vital to a wide range
of LCLS experiments in which a sample is excited by an
optical pulse and probed by an x-ray pulse. At the Stanford
Linear Accelerator Center, ultrashort x-ray pulses were
generated when 80-femtosecond electron pulses from an
accelerator were sent through an undulator magnet; the x-ray
and electron pulses were perfectly coincident in time. A
crystal placed near the path of the electron beam
experienced intense electric fields that altered the optical
properties of the crystal, the electro-optic (EO) effect. An
optical laser beam passing through the crystal sensed the EO
effect, turning the time delay between the optical pulse and
the electron/x-ray pulse into a spatial displacement on a
detector. The current timing resolution of 60 femtoseconds
could be improved to 5 femtoseconds, matching the projected
performance of accelerator-based light sources into the
foreseeable future.
Molecular
Fragmentation Observed in Unprecedented Detail.
Researchers
working at the Advanced Light Source have advanced our
ability to observe the total destruction of a molecule to
new levels of sophistication, challenging theoretical
understanding and paving the way for research to be
performed at next-generation light sources. When a hydrogen
molecule is exposed to x-ray photons of the appropriate
energy, the two electrons it possesses can be ejected at
once, leaving behind two positively charged nuclei that
rapidly explode. Thus, absorption of one x-ray photon causes
the complete destruction of the molecule. Using modern
techniques of three-dimensional imaging and ultrafast
timing, the motions of all four particles from a single
event can be related to one another. The results are
surprising and challenge our current theoretical
understanding of how x-rays interact with matter.
Complete
Ionization of Clusters in Intense VUV Laser Fields.
BES-supported
researchers have developed a theory that explains
recently-observed ionization behavior of xenon clusters that
were exposed to intense, coherent vacuum ultraviolet (VUV)
pulses from a free-electron laser (FEL). Surprisingly, at
intensities that produce only single ionization of an
isolated xenon atom, the clusters irradiated by the FEL
showed massive ionization in which every atom in the cluster
was highly ionized, producing ions with charge states up to
+8. This implies that each xenon atom in the cluster
absorbed about 30 VUV photons. The key difference between
clusters and isolated atoms is that energetic electron-ion
collisions occur within the clusters and modify the
single-photon absorption cross section, thus allowing a
large number of photons to be absorbed. This process is
called “inverse bremsstrahlung” and, when incorporated into
a simple linear absorption model, clearly reproduces the
experimental observations. Theories such as this will be
needed to understand the behavior of matter when it is
exposed to intense, coherent X-ray pulses from
next-generation light sources such as the LCLS.
The
Roaming Atom: Straying from the Lowest-energy Reaction
Pathway.
A fundamental
tenet of modern chemical reaction theory is the concept of
the transition state, a transient molecular entity that lies
on the most direct pathway from reactants to products and
whose properties govern the rate of reaction. Recently, it
was shown that in a simple chemical reaction, the
decomposition of formaldehyde, a substantial fraction of the
dissociating molecules avoid the region of the transition
state entirely. These studies combine ion imaging
experiments with theoretical trajectory calculations to
reveal that the dissociation takes place via a mechanism in
which one hydrogen atom begins to roam away from the
molecule and nearly dissociates, then returns to react with
the remaining hydrogen atom. Along with other recent
findings on reactions such as O + CH3, these
results challenge conventional notions of chemical reactions
and raise the question of how common such processes might
be. A key question is whether such a mechanism applies only
to reactions forming hydrogen, during which a light hydrogen
atom may rapidly explore regions far from the conventional
transition state.
New
Combustion Intermediates Discovered.
A complete mechanism for the combustion of simple
hydrocarbon fuels includes dozens of distinct molecular
species and hundreds of chemical reactions. The
identification of which molecules to include in a combustion
chemistry mechanism still requires experimental detection,
particularly for reactive intermediates. A class of unstable
molecules known as enols, which have OH groups adjacent to
carbon-carbon double bonds, are not currently included in
standard combustion models. In work performed at the
Advanced Light Source, significant quantities of 2, 3, and
4-carbon enols were observed using photoionization mass
spectrometry of flames burning representative compounds from
modern fuels. Concentration profiles of the enols taken in
the model flames demonstrate that their presence cannot be
accounted for by isomerization reactions that convert more
stable molecules into enols. This leads to the conclusion
that an entire class of important reaction intermediates is
absent from current combustion models, and the models will
need substantial revision.
Unified
Molecular Picture of the Surfaces of Aqueous Solutions.
A long-term
controversy exists regarding the detailed, molecular nature
of the surface of an aqueous solution containing molecular
ions (or electrolytes). Joint theoretical and experimental
studies have led to a new, unified view of the structure of
the interface between air and aqueous electrolytes.
Molecular dynamics simulations have shown that in basic salt
solutions positively charged ions (cations) are repelled
from the interface, while negatively charged ions (anions)
exhibit a propensity to migrate toward the surface that
correlates with the anion’s polarizability and physical
size. In acidic solution, however, there is a high
propensity for cations to be located at the air/solution
interface. In this case, both cations and anions are
concentrated at the surface and reduce the surface tension
of water. These conclusions have been verified by
surface-selective nonlinear vibrational spectroscopy
experiments. Understanding the behavior of ions at aqueous
surfaces is important to the heterogeneous chemistry of
seawater aerosols and to the tropospheric ozone destruction
in the Arctic and Antarctic due to reactions on ice pack
covered with sea spray.
Self-Assembled Artificial Photosynthesis.
In natural
photosynthesis, self-assembly of light-absorbing molecules,
or chromophores, at specific distances and orientations is
especially important in two parts of the overall
photosynthetic system: the antenna component, where light is
collected; and the reaction center, where charge is
separated. Recently, a green organic chromophore was
discovered that exhibits photophysical and photoredox
properties similar to those of natural chlorophyll a. When
conjoined with four similar chromophores, the molecules
self-assemble in solution to form an antenna-reaction center
complex. Self-organization of the large structure is
believed due to the propensity of these similar chromophores
to align in a cofacial stacking arrangement. The
self-assembled organic has attributes that closely mimic the
primary events in photosynthesis: efficient light energy
capture over a wide spectral range, energy funneling toward
a core electron-transferring unit, and excited-state
symmetry breaking of a molecular pair resulting in charge
separation. The structure of the new array was determined at
the Advanced Photon Source.
Two-Dimensional Spectroscopy Reveals Energy Transport
Pathways In Photosynthesis.
Photosynthetic antennas capture solar photons and transport
the absorbed energy to the photosynthetic reaction center
where charge separation occurs. Energy transfer by the
antenna is nearly 100 percent efficient, although the
mechanism for the process has been elusive. A novel
spectroscopic technique known as a two-dimensional photon
echo, commonly used in the infrared, has been extended to
the visible spectral region and has revealed important
details about energy transfer in photosynthetic light
harvesting. In antenna pigments from green sulfur bacteria,
distinct energy transport pathways have been identified that
depend on the spatial properties of the pigment-protein
complex. Contrary to the accepted model of a sequential
cascade in energy from high- to low-lying excited states,
these results reveal excited states that are distributed
over two or more chlorophyll molecules and a pathway in
which energy levels are skipped on the way to the lowest
level. The new two-dimensional electronic spectroscopic
method, which measures electronic couplings and maps the
flow of excitation energy, opens the door to investigation
of other photoactive systems and can be applied to improving
the efficiency of molecular solar cells.
How Water
Networks Accommodate an Excess Electron.
In bulk water
an excess electron can become trapped within a cavity formed
by a network of hydrogen-bonded water molecules. This
“solvated electron” is a critical chemical intermediate in
the radiolysis of aqueous solutions. One approach to
understanding the solvated electron is to study the
structure and dynamics of clusters of water containing an
excess electron in the gas phase. This approach has not yet
been successful because these anionic water clusters are
hard to make and because an accurate theoretical description
for them is lacking. Recent work has shown that anionic
clusters containing four to six water molecules can be
created within gas-phase matrices of inert argon clusters,
where their infrared spectra can be obtained. Analysis of
these spectra using density functional theory shows that the
diffuse electron interacts most strongly with a single water
molecule that is hydrogen bonded to two other waters in a
rearranged network. The spectra also exhibit evidence for
the rapid exchange of energy between the vibrations of the
hydrogen atoms on the unique molecule and the excess
electron. This new technique can now be extended to larger
water clusters that better mimic the solvated electron in
bulk water.
Gold, a
Magnificent Nanoscale Catalyst.
When gold
atoms are assembled as tiny clusters smaller than 8
nanometers and attached to the surface of titanium oxide,
they acquire the remarkable ability to dissociate oxygen at
room temperature and insert that oxygen into very specific
locations in molecules. The origin of such unusual
reactivity—discovered some 10 years ago—has until recently
evaded a widely accepted explanation. Numerous parameters in
the material are important and usually cross-correlated:
gold particle dimension and shape, metal oxidation state,
oxide support reducibility, and interaction of the gold with
the support. Separating those parameters in these materials,
which are macroscopically amorphous, would demand special
analytical techniques that are able to focus on the detailed
properties of individual chemical bonds in the solid.
Therefore, researchers pursued a different route using
existing and well-known surface science techniques: they
accurately synthesized and stacked one-atom-thick layers of
gold extended in two dimensions, and supported them on top
of perfect oxide crystals of known structure. They
demonstrated that the nanoscale properties of gold metal are
achievable by controlling the layer thickness to between 2
and 3 atoms. Such knowledge can now be extended to the
manipulation of selective oxidation chemistry or the
discovery and assembly of new catalysts.
Theory
Guides Scientists on How to Extract Hydrogen from Natural
Sources and Store it Efficiently.
Two of the
keys to a hydrogen economy are having an abundant supply of
hydrogen and having materials that can store such hydrogen
in a readily accessible form. Both of those challenges can
be addressed by designing materials—chemical catalysts—that
bind atomic hydrogen with medium strength and release
molecular or gaseous hydrogen with very little heating. A
random or systematic search for such catalysts, even with
high-throughput techniques, would be very expensive and take
many years. Scientists resorted to so-called
density-functional theory, which is an electronic structure
theory of matter, and other theories that describe chemical
reactivity to design the ideal bimetallic catalysts,
combinations of two metals, in special atomic arrangements
that would result in solids with the desired properties.
They arrived at a new theoretical construct called
near-surface alloys of metals, such as a crystal of platinum
containing a single layer of nickel atoms in its second row,
that possesses the unique catalytic behavior sought. Having
by now mapped entire families of such new theoretical
materials—a feat unachievable by direct experimental
means—these scientists have embarked on the challenge of
fabricating these new structures and have already
demonstrated their concept with a few successful examples.
Devising
the Next-Generation Wonder Molecules—Fine Chemistry inside
Nano Cages.
In the future
drugs, fibers, fuel additives, molecular electronics
devices, solar energy conversion dyes, and flavors may be
synthesized in a similar manner using sets of discrete
cavities to contain and isolate single molecules or just
reacting pairs of molecules and catalysts. The
“single-molecule catalysis” concept would allow maximum
control of the environment surrounding a molecule, the
spatial arrangement adopted by its atoms, the type of bonds
made available for reaction, and even how the energy is
coupled to and transferred to the molecule. Such level of
control would result in the ability to break bonds or insert
or remove atoms or change the spatial arrangement of atoms
in very specific ways and not others. The resulting products
would possess properties—chemical, biological, optical,
electronic, or mechanical—superior to those achievable
through less controllable chemistry. Researchers are
beginning to show that this goal may be achievable.
So-called supramolecular or larger-than-molecules cages made
with organometallic compounds were used to host other
organometallic complexes that have catalytic properties,
such as the ability to specifically break carbon-hydrogen
bonds. They have shown that certain carbon-hydrogen bonds
are selectively broken and that only certain members of a
chemical family undergo reaction, and not others. They have
even shown that the constrained environment also leads to
enhanced rate of production of the most desired product,
which is in itself a revolutionary discovery.
Controlling
the Crash-landing of Biomolecules on Surfaces.
Researchers have, for the first time,
demonstrated that peptide ions retain at least one proton
after soft landing on chemically modified, “fluffy”
surfaces. Controlled deposition on surfaces holds great
potential for applications such as selective chemical
separations and analysis. Soft landing refers to the intact
capture of large size-selected, charged molecules on
surfaces of liquids or solids. Previous research suggests
that soft landing provides a means for highly specific
deposition of molecules of any size and complexity on
surfaces using only a tiny fraction of material normally
used in standard synthetic approaches. In the present
studies, peptide ions are attractive as model systems that
can provide important insights on the behavior of
soft-landed macromolecules. The researchers used a specially
designed mass spectrometer configured for studying
interactions of large ions with surfaces. The special
characteristics of the instrument enabled quantitative
investigation of the effect of the speed and mass of ions on
the soft landing process. For example, it was determined
that even collisions with high energies can result in
deposition of intact ions on surfaces.
Removal of
Radium Ions from Water using Special “Grabber” Molecules.
Researchers demonstrated a process that is highly
selective for binding radium cations. It is a significant
challenge to remove radioactive radium cations from
wastewater since the large excess of other non-radioactive
ions in solution can interfere with the selective extraction
of radium. In the new work, a specially designed molecule
was used to selectively bind radium. This supramolecular
assembly made from isoguanosine is just the right size to
extract radium in the presence of other cations such as
magnesium and sodium.
How
Molecules Move through Small Holes.
Measurements of transport through 15-nanometer pores have
been compared to theoretical results to yield new
understanding of differential transport at small scales.
This knowledge is important for an understanding of
separation processes at the molecular level, and could lead
to a new generation of analytical devices based on
microfluidic platforms. By adjusting physical parameters
such as the channel diameter, and applying the appropriate
external electrical potential, arrays of nanochannels—formed
by nanocapillary array membranes—can be made to behave like
digital fluidic switches, and the movement of molecules from
one side of the array to the other side can be controlled.
Combining model calculations with experimental
characterization provides important insights into the
mechanism of molecular transport and, additionally, provides
quantitative measures of the surface characteristics of the
interior of the pores.
Using
Thorium and Uranium to Activate the Carbon-Hydrogen and
Carbon-Nitrogen Bonds in Molecules.
The extent of
electron-sharing in bonds with metals is an important
property in catalysis. The correlation of bond covalency
with reactivity can be elucidated by determining the
reactivity of actinide (thorium, uranium, and other elements
in the same row of the periodic table) ions with multiply
bonded functional groups. Pyridine N-oxide (C5H5N-O),
which has a relatively stable benzene-like ring, can
transfer oxygen atoms to certain transition metals. Chemists
have discovered that some uranium and thorium compounds can
make C-H bonds in pyridine N-oxide more reactive by forming
metal-carbon bonds. The structures of the products produced
in these new reactions have been confirmed by x-ray
crystallography. These reactions provide examples of C-H and
C=N bond activation that is mediated by actinide metals.
These studies may offer insights into catalytic removal of
nitrogen-containing compounds from petroleum feedstocks,
which is necessary to reduce nitrogen oxide emission in
fuels.
Elusive
Carbon Dioxide Binding Mode Discovered in New Uranium
Complex.
Carbon
dioxide (CO2) is a stable molecule with two
strong carbon-oxygen bonds. Inorganic chemists seek to mimic
the catalytic chemical processes by which carbon dioxide is
modified by plants to form sugars. This process can remove
CO2 from the atmosphere and minimize atmospheric
release of CO2 in industrial processes such as
refinement of hydrocarbons. A new exquisitely-designed
uranium complex has been found to react with CO2
such that one electron is transferred from the U3+
center to CO2, producing a species with an
unusual linear CO2 that binds to uranium and has
one weaker oxygen-carbon bond. Uranium is an essential
component of this species because the U3+ ion is
large, electron-rich, and has the right structure to
participate in bonding. This species is unique in that the
CO2 remains linear, with one C-O bond longer and
weaker than the other. The molecular structure, bond lengths
and oxidation state were established experimentally. The
linear M-O-C-O coordination had previously been seen only in
an iron enzyme. The new uranium-CO2 complex
represents a chemical image of a catalytic process and may
make it possible to design new catalysts to reduce the
concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere.
Plutonium
is
Caged and Illuminated by Synchrotron Light.
A new
complexant, which was synthesized to extract plutonium and
other actinide elements selectively, has shown promise to
remove plutonium from mammals. Microscopic crystals (about
the thickness of a human hair) of a plutonium complex have
been produced to provide a structural model in order to
design new actinide-selective binders. Using the Advanced
Light Source, researchers determined the detailed structure
of these crystals and showed that individual plutonium ions
are trapped in cavities produced by eight oxygen atoms from
the binder molecules. This structural determination will
serve as a model of such complexes on which to base the
design of novel molecules that are cages for toxic metals.
Sheer
Energy: Thinner, Cheaper Fuel Cell Catalysts.
Fuel cells
are a major source of clean energy in the hydrogen economy.
Their economic development critically depends on cheaper
electrocatalysts for oxygen reduction. The slow nature of
this reaction causes a major limit in fuel cell efficiency.
High precious metal content is another drawback of existing
technology. Researchers coated five cheaper metals with a
layer of platinum one atom thick and tested them. For most
of the platinum "monolayers," the reaction occurred more
slowly than it does on the thicker platinum layer currently
used in fuel cells. But adding a monolayer of platinum to
the cheaper metal palladium sped up the reaction.
Theoretical computations predicted how the platinum
monolayers are affected by atoms from the underlying layer
of metal. The theory agreed well with the experiments and
showed that a platinum monolayer on palladium balances two
competing needs: it is reactive enough to break the bonds
between oxygen atoms yet does not cling to the oxygen atoms
so tightly that it prevents them from reacting with
hydrogen. This method can dramatically decrease the
expensive metal loading in fuel cells and improve cost and
performance.
Advances
in Computational Chemistry Research.
Basic research in computational chemistry has resulted in
a superior method for the prediction of chemical behavior
from computational quantum mechanics and statistical
mechanics. The method is based on treating the solvent in
which a molecule is placed as a continuum, and determining
the cavity-formation energy from statistical mechanics, and
the electric contributions from quantum mechanics. This work
has now been published and a leading chemical process
simulation company has incorporated this method into the
most recent release of their industry dominating process
simulator. This work will impact modern industrial plant and
process design and lead to higher energy efficiencies
through effective modeling of manufacturing processes.
Is CO2
Gone When You Put It In The Ground?
There are
only two options for dealing with increasing CO2
concentrations in the atmosphere—get rid of new CO2
actively or discontinue producing it and wait for natural
processes to remove the excess over a very long time. Both
approaches will likely be needed in the future. Researchers
have been developing capabilities for realistic modeling of
CO2 injection into deep geological formations and
for understanding dynamic processes associated with the
injection in order to provide a scientific basis for
evaluating the injections feasibility. Computational models
were developed for coupling fluid properties, chemical and
thermodynamic data, and rock-fluid interaction measurements.
Reservoir dynamics were investigated on different levels of
complexity and scale for natural and engineered systems.
These types of calculations also form the basis for
understanding possible leaks which may be major regulatory
and insurance concerns for large scale geological CO2
sequestration. The improved computational codes from this
project were also used as the basis for design calculations
for CO2 injection at the Frio Test Site as part
of the Office of Fossil Energy funded Climate Change
Technology Program.
Improving
Our Vision of the Subsurface.
Large scale
subsurface seismic measurements, although adequate for
simple oil and gas exploration or waste site
characterization, are inadequate for high hydrocarbon
recovery rates or more effective environmental remediation
or monitoring. Research is providing a better understanding
of geophysical measurements of compressional and shear wave
velocities, elastic moduli, and seismic anisotropy as they
vary as functions of porosity, permeability, fluid contents,
and stresses. A fiber-optic “optical” strainmeter has been
developed that provides spatially averaged properties over a
centimeter or “core” length scale intermediate between point
measurements and a meter-scale bulk-measurements. The
increased accuracy and sensitivity in measuring elastic
deformation during applied sinusoidal stress will enable
better discrimination between strain (elastic wave
transmission efficiency) and phase lags (attenuation
indicative of fluid content and type). In addition, the
highly precise optical strain gage measurements will allow
higher resolution testing of the significance of different
types of heterogeneity at the core scale, in order to enable
prediction of these properties at larger scales. The fiber
optic sensor has been demonstrated to have a significantly
higher sensitivity than other strain gages.
The Auxin
Receptor: A Holy Grail in Plant Science.
The plant
growth hormone called auxin is a small molecule, indole
acetic acid (IAA)—too small to have the expected breadth of
“informational” content to achieve its myriad effects of
controlling the growth of leaves, stems, roots, flowers,
fruits, and growth changes in response to light and gravity.
Recent research demonstrated that IAA interacts directly
with a much larger molecule, a protein, which was earlier
shown to affect plant growth by stimulating the expression
(activation) of certain growth-related genes. Now the
solution to the mystery of auxin action is becoming clear.
It turns out to be similar to an electric switch, but a bit
more complex. We are beginning to unravel the molecular
details of auxin’s biological activity.
Selected FY 2005 Facility Accomplishments
§
The Advanced Light Source (ALS)
Beam-Size Stability Improved.
Over the last five years, elliptically polarizing undulators
(EPUs) have been used very successfully at the ALS to
generate high-intensity photon beams with variable photon
polarization (from linear to circular). However, users were
not completely satisfied with the EPUs performance because
they degraded the beam quality by increasing the photon beam
size. Based on detailed magnet measurements, a system was
developed that maintains a constant beam size. It is now
being employed in routine user operation solving a problem
that has affected many other light sources.
New Undulator Beamline for High-Resolution Photoemission
Electron Microscopy.
Beamline 11.0.1 is a new elliptically polarizing undulator (EPU)
beamline dedicated to photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM)
at the ALS. An EPU, the third installed at the ALS, delivers
light into the new beamline, which began commissioning March
2005. With full polarization control and continuous coverage
optimized over key energy regions, this beamline will be an
attractive user facility for organic and magnetic
polarization-contrast microscopy. This beamline will have an
aberration-corrected photoemission electron microscope
(PEEM-3) with a spatial resolution of approximately 5
nanometers.
New In-Vacuum Undulator Beamline for Femtosecond X-ray
Studies.
Beamline 6.0.1 for soft x-ray science with ultrashort photon
pulses of 200 femtoseconds was ready for commissioning in
July 2005. The beamline is unique in the U.S. and will be
made available to users in FY 2006. The primary components
are a vacuum undulator to produce x-rays over a wide
photon-energy range, optical components, including a
spectrograph for recording an entire x-ray absorption
spectrum from one photon pulse, and a high-repetition-rate
femtosecond laser system.
§
The Advanced Photon Source (APS)
More Stable Beams.
Using a technique pioneered at the APS, 175 girders
supporting accelerator components in the APS storage ring
have been displaced by as much as 6 mm during scheduled
tri-annual maintenance periods over the last seven years,
eliminating the stray radiation background signals. As a
result, photon beam position monitors (BPMs) for insertion
devices over the entire storage ring circumference are now
operating on line. The APS leads the world in the use of
photon BPMs for insertion device beamlines. Use of these
monitors has improved long-term x-ray beam angular stability
by more than a factor of five. Users are able to scan the
x‑ray photon energy by changing the insertion device gap on
demand, while still maintaining superior photon beam
stability on their samples. The payoff is improved ability
to resolve micron and nanometer-sized features in samples
Improved Timing Experiments.
The x-ray pulse structure at the APS is on the order of 100
picoseconds. This pulse width enables special classes of
timing experiments where the physical phenomena require fast
time resolution. Recent experiments at the APS using this
technique have involved the study of porphyrins that may one
day form the building blocks of novel catalysts, photonic
devices, and efficient solar-power units. The APS has a
special operating mode to facilitate these types of
measurements. In this mode, a single x-ray timing pulse is
isolated from the other x-ray pulses. The intensity in the
pulse is determined by the amount of charge stored in the
isolated electron bunch that generates the photon pulse.
Recent changes to the storage ring top-up injection method,
which allows the APS linear accelerator to vary the
injection charge along with increasing the injection
frequency from two minutes to one minute, have resulted in
doubling the single pulse-intensity without adversely
affecting the non-timing experiments.
Improved Mirrors for X-ray Focusing.
Elliptically-shaped mirrors based on new technology
developed at the Advanced Photon Source are being used to
achieve unprecedented focusing of high-brightness x-ray
beams. These mirrors are especially useful for producing the
microbeams that are used to probe the composition and
structure of materials. They are being applied to studies
such as microstructural analyses of structural changes
arising from welding operations and detailed investigations
of the three-dimensional structure of complex crystalline
samples.
Nanoprobe Beamline Commissioned for First Experiments.
The world’s first hard x-ray nanoprobe was activated in
March 2005, at the APS. The Nanoprobe beamline is a central
component of the new Center for Nanoscale Materials at
Argonne National Laboratory. The x-ray nanoprobe will have a
spatial resolution of 30 nanometers or better, the highest
of any hard x-ray microscopy beamline in the world. It will
offer fluorescence, diffraction, and transmission imaging in
the x-ray spectral range of 3-30 keV, making it a valuable
tool for studying nanomaterials.
§
The National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS)
New X-ray Micro-Diffraction Instrument.
This instrument to be used for nanoscale research was
developed at the X13B beamline to take advantage of the
small source size of the in-vacuum mini-gap undulator in the
X13 straight section of the NSLS x-ray ring. It consists of
five main subsystems: monochromator, focusing optics, sample
manipulator, charge-coupled detector (CCD) area detector,
and a point detector with two degrees of freedom. The sample
stages are equipped with integrated submicron position
encoders for excellent positional precision and
repeatability. The point detector assembly allows the use of
analyzer crystals to obtain better resolution. A key design
feature is the close attention paid to mechanical coupling
of the focusing optics to the sample positioner to reduce
vibrations and improve the microscope stability for the
users.
Elliptically-Polarized Wiggler Beamline Upgrade.
The Elliptically-Polarized Wiggler (EPW) located in the X13
straight section of the NSLS x-ray is a unique radiation
source that produces time-varying elliptically-polarized
x-rays for magnetism studies. A major upgrade was performed
on beamline X13A to enhance its performance. It included
replacement of the existing horizontal focusing mirror,
which had been plagued by poor reflectivity as well as
mechanical and thermal stability problems, with a new
water-cooled spherical mirror. The new mirror system
increases the horizontal photon collecting angle by a factor
of two and is fully motorized to allow precise manipulation
and optimization of the mirror’s position. In addition, the
beamline interlock and control systems were upgraded. The
beamline upgrade has resulted in an order of magnitude
increase in the photon intensity delivered to the sample,
and the elimination of mechanical and thermal instabilities.
These improvements have led to more efficient use of the
beamline and increased magnetic sensitivity in the
measurements.
Development of a Photon-Counting Silicon Microstrip Array
Detector.
The NSLS detector group has developed an extremely versatile
1-dimensional position sensitive detector. It is based on
custom microelectronics developed at Brookhaven National
Laboratory, and consists of a linear array of silicon
photodiodes, each 0.125 x 4 mm, which is connected to a set
of 32-channel custom integrated circuits and a
microprocessor system. The detector system’s performance is
several orders of magnitude better than one can achieve with
charge-coupled type detectors. It is easily adaptable to as
large an array as is needed by the application. For example,
arrays of 320 and 640 strips, 40 and 80mm long have been
fabricated for real-time x-ray scattering.
X-ray Ring Lattice Symmetry Restored.
The most direct benefit for the NSLS user community was the
restoration of the x-ray ring magnetic field lattice
symmetry, which for many beamlines resulted in a 25 percent
reduction of the horizontal beam size and an increase in
photon intensity delivered to a sample. The desired eight
fold symmetry of the x-ray ring magnet lattice can be lost
from errors in the x-ray ring quadrupole field strengths.
The quadrupole errors can be partially compensated by trim
coils available in the x-ray ring for one of the quadrupole
magnet families. These errors were determined from an
elaborate analysis of the electron orbit measurements taken
as quadrupole magnet field strengths were systematically
varied. This improvement allowed the NSLS to restore the
eight fold symmetric x-ray ring magnet settings for routine
operations.
§
The Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory (SSRL)
First SPEAR3 Run Completed.
In the commissioning run for the new SPEAR3 accelerator, the
facility proved to be exceptionally reliable, providing very
stable beam for a very high percent (97) of the scheduled
time. This is higher than ever recorded with SPEAR2, and an
exceptional achievement for a new storage ring. The user run
commenced in March and the SPEAR3 storage ring operated at 3
GeV/100 mA and provided 30+ hour life times. (The average
uptime over the past five years was 96%.) During the run,
users on 239 different proposals received beam time in a
total of 466 experimental starts involving 1,516
researchers.
First High-Current SPEAR3 Tests Performed.
SSRL conducted three special 8-hour shifts of SPEAR3
operation with currents above the official safety envelope
value of 100 mA. These high-current test shifts took place
on swing shifts with the experimental floor cleared of
non-radiation workers. The main purpose of these tests was
to determine if multi-bunch electron beam instabilities will
be encountered at higher current operation, in which case a
program to implement a costly multi-bunch feedback system
would have to be launched. Other potential problems,
primarily excessive component heating, are also of concern.
The current reached in these tests was limited to 225 mA by
the power rating of some absorbers in a legacy insertion
device chamber. This current was reached and a comprehensive
search revealed no apparent beam instabilities.
New Methods Developed for Studying Structures of
Nanomaterials.
The reactivity and properties of nanomaterials are highly
influenced by particle size and atomic-scale structure.
Researchers at SSRL have recently demonstrated that the
combined use of several x-ray scattering and absorption
measurement techniques leads to quantum leaps in
understanding the structures of nanomaterials. X-ray
scattering measurements allow experimenters to combine size
and shape information with structural information to remove
the small-particle size contribution to x-ray diffraction
peak broadening, whereas x-ray absorption measurements
provide complementary, metal-specific information on local
atomic structure in disordered materials. Measurements on
zinc sulfide have conclusively demonstrated that structural
relaxation of surface atoms causes inhomogeneous internal
strain, markedly altering its material properties. This
multi-technique nano-characterization approach has further
been advanced by developing methods for the routine
characterization of bacterial nano-minerals under
fully-hydrated in-situ conditions. Bacterial nanominerals
are an important class of naturally occurring nanomaterials
that help to control the composition of the atmosphere, the
potability of natural waters, and the arability of soils.
This multiple-technique method provides unique information
of wide interest to the nanoscience community.
§
The Intense Pulsed Neutron Source (IPNS)
Simultaneous Measurement of Mixed-conductor Lattice
Relaxation, Diffusion, and Gas Conversion.
The General Purpose Powder Diffractometer (GPPD) at the IPNS
is equipped with a specially designed controlled-atmosphere
furnace, where samples in pellet or hollow-tube form are
exposed to mixtures of gases to control oxygen and hydrogen
content from highly oxidizing to highly reducing
environments. Using two separate gas delivery “circuits,”
simulated membrane operation conditions can be achieved
whereby the responses of oxygen-permeable membranes to
strong oxygen partial pressure gradients can be studied.
Exhaust gases are analyzed with a Residual Gas Analyzer to
probe for leakage and to quantify gas conversion reactions.
Dense ceramic components with mixed-conduction properties
and high oxygen permeability are important as membranes for
oxygen separation and solid oxide fuel cell applications.
Membranes are typically operated at elevated temperatures
(800-1000°C) and exposed to large oxygen partial pressure
gradients. This experiment reproduces the conditions under
which these membranes will be used commercially and provides
insights into the unusual differential oxygen partial
pressure stability of these materials.
Accelerator Systems Improvements.
Efforts include: completion of the beamline-magnet power
supply upgrades, replacing the originals with
higher-efficiency and better regulated units; completion of
a full year of operation of the first of two new
kicker-magnet power supplies; and completion of full-power
tests of the new third-rf system that will be installed in
the synchrotron ring to provide new proton beam capture and
handling capabilities.
National Neutron and X-ray Scattering School.
During August 2005, Argonne National Laboratory again hosted
the National School on Neutron and X-Ray Scattering. The
school continues to attract outstanding graduate students
and post-doctoral appointees with 150 applications for the
60 positions available in 2005. The intensive training
introduces students to the theory of, and provides hands-on
experimentation in, x-ray and neutron scattering.
§
The Manuel
Lujan Jr. Neutron Scattering Center (LANSCE)
Neutron Scattering Winter Schools.
The First and Second Annual LANSCE Neutron Scattering Winter
Schools were held, with 30 students from a wide geographical
distribution attending each School. The 2004 topic was
magnetism and the 2005 topic was mechanical properties of
materials. During nine intensive days in Los Alamos,
students had lectures from world experts on the key
materials issues for the School theme, modeling and theory,
and neutron scattering techniques addressing these issues.
In addition, the students had the opportunity to gain
hands-on experience in neutron-scattering techniques and
data analysis.
New Sample Environments.
A major emphasis on sample environments in FY 2005 has
greatly enhanced the low temperature, high field, and high
pressure possibilities for user experiments. Investments in
new low temperature sample environments, high pressure
instrumentation, sample goniometers, and support staff have
made users more productive. Along with the 11-Tesla
superconducting magnet commissioned in 2004, the Lujan
Center’s suite of sample environments for condensed matter
physics has dramatically improved in FY 2005. A rheometer
designed to synchronize with the 20 Hz Lujan Center pulsed
neutron beam is expected to be tested in FY 2005. It will
provide a unique capability to impose accurate hydrodynamic
shear on polymer solutions and colloidal suspensions while
performing structural measurements by small-angle neutron
scattering.
Instruments Enhancement.
The High Intensity Powder Diffractometer (HIPD) and the
Single Crystal Diffractometer (SCD) have received upgrades
to software, shielding, alignments, and hardware that have
increased their neutron intensity, user throughput, and
efficiency. New hardware and software controls on the Low-Q
Diffractometer (LQD) and a new detector have made small
angle neutron scattering (SANS) more effective.
§
The High Flux Isotope Reactor (HFIR)
Common Guide Casings for Seven New Instruments Installed.
Neutron guides transport cold neutrons (energies ~0.1–20 meV)
with little loss in flux. This permits one to transport
neutron beams from the source to instruments several tens of
meters away. This lowers the instrumental background noise
from gamma rays and unwanted neutrons since one can place
the instruments far from the source. Also, the guides have a
slight curvature which removes the “line-of-sight” view of
the neutron source and further reduces this background. The
guides are made by coating glass with layered coatings
called supermirrors which are highly reflective for
neutrons. These flat, coated glass plates are then assembled
to form hollow rectangular cross-sectioned pipes with the
coated sides forming the interior walls of the pipes. These
guides will be illuminated with neutrons produced by the new
HFIR cold source to be installed early in 2006.
HB-4 Shield Tunnel and Velocity Selector Shielding
Installed.
A great deal of neutron shielding is required to shield the
exit of the new HFIR cold source and components of the cold
neutron beamlines. The first and largest general section of
shielding for the new instruments was constructed. Also, the
lead shielding for the velocity selectors for the two small
angle neutron scattering (SANS) instruments was assembled.
These components are essential for the new Center for
Neutron Scattering cold neutron spectrometers.
SANS 1 Detector Tank and Internal Components Installed.
The largest component for the first Small Angle Neutron
Scattering (SANS) instruments has been installed. This giant
tank will contain the detector for this instrument. The 1
meter square detector will ride on rails inside the
evacuated volume of the tank.
The
Neutron Reflectometer Commissioned.
A new
instrument, the neutron reflectometer, was commissioned for
use in the general user program at the HFIR Center for
Neutron Scattering. This machine is optimized for the
studies of surfaces and interfaces. It is the fifth Cold
Neutron Source instrument fully commissioned and will be
used for the studies of polymers, biomaterials, thin solid
films, and surfactants.
Selected FY 2004 Scientific
Highlights/Accomplishments
Materials
Sciences and Engineering Subprogram
The Ultimate Analysis: Single-Atom
Spectroscopy in Bulk Solids. A longstanding dream in
materials sciences and engineering has been to see and study those specific
individual atoms that are critical to bulk properties and to determine their
location and active configuration. Now, through an enhanced scanning
transmission electron microscope with improved optics, researchers are able to
observe an individual atom within its bulk environment and characterize its
chemical state via spectroscopic means, determining its valence and bonding with
nearest neighbors. The advance was made possible by correction of lens
aberrations in the electron microscope to give a smaller yet brighter beam with
a diameter of approximately 1 Ångstrom. Single-atom sensitivity, the ultimate
analysis, opens up all areas of materials science and engineering to fundamental
investigations in a revolutionary way
New Thin-film Texture Discovered with
Potential for Nanotech Applications. One of the most fundamental
structural properties of a thin film is its “texture,” which is the
orientation of individual grains with respect to the deposition substrate. Three
types of texture are commonly observed: random, where no single orientation is
dominant; fiber-texture, where the film grains are parallel to the growth
direction, but random about that direction; and epitaxial, where the film
orientation is fixed in three dimensions with respect to the substrate. The new,
fourth type of texture, named axiotaxy, was observed in a number of thin film
systems in which the film and substrate share a common plane orientation as a
consequence of crystal lattice matching. This new texture provides a potential
method for assembling large numbers of nanocrystals in regular patterns for
nanotech applications
Negative Refraction - New Frontier for
Superlenses.
The first demonstration of negative
and positive refraction of visible light at the same crystal interface was
recognized as one of the “Top 15 Physics News Stories of 2003” by the
American Institute of Physics. Nature provides us with optical refraction which
is always positive: that is, the incident and transmitted light through an
interface of two different media are on opposite sides of the interface normal.
For negative refraction, they are on the same side of the interface normal. The
beauty of negative refraction is total transmission and zero reflection,
regardless of the angle of light incidence. These properties lend themselves to
the creation of “super lenses.” Laser
beams can be steered in nano-photonic devices without loss, and optical
telescopes can be built with higher resolution. The new interface uses a
ferroelastic twin domain boundary such as a yttrium vanadate (YVO4) bi-crystal
and is applicable to any frequency of the electromagnetic spectrum. As a vision
for the future, electron beams could be focused more efficiently in highly
sensitive electron microscopes