Publications by authors named "Wiegart L"

Physical optics simulations for beamlines and experiments allow users to test experiment feasibility and optimize beamline settings ahead of beam time in order to optimize valuable beam time at synchrotron light sources like NSLS-II. Further, such simulations also help to develop and test experimental data processing methods and software in advance. The Synchrotron Radiation Workshop (SRW) software package supports such complex simulations.

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Sophisticated thin film growth techniques increasingly rely on the addition of a plasma component to open or widen a processing window, particularly at low temperatures. Taking advantage of continued increases in accelerator-based X-ray source brilliance, this real-time study uses X-ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy (XPCS) to elucidate the nanoscale surface dynamics during Plasma-Enhanced Atomic Layer Deposition (PE-ALD) of an epitaxial indium nitride film. Ultrathin films are synthesized from repeated cycles of alternating self-limited surface reactions induced by temporally separated pulses of the material precursor and plasma reactant, allowing the influence of each on the evolving morphology to be examined.

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X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy (XPCS) is a versatile tool to measure dynamics on the nanometer to micrometer scale in bulk samples. XPCS has also been applied in grazing incidence (GI) geometry to examine the dynamics of surface layers. However, considering GI scattering experiments more universally, the GI geometry leads to a superposition of signals due to reflection and refraction effects, also known from the distorted-wave Born approximation (DWBA).

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Bicontinuous structures promise applications in a broad range of research fields, such as energy storage, membrane science, and biomaterials. Kinetically arrested spinodal decomposition is found responsible for stabilizing such structures in different types of materials. A recently developed solvent segregation driven gel (SeedGel) is demonstrated to realize bicontinuous channels thermoreversibly with tunable domain sizes by trapping nanoparticles in a particle domain.

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Article Synopsis
  • X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy (XPCS) is affected by various noise types that can obscure important data about a sample's dynamics.
  • Researchers propose using convolutional neural network encoder-decoder models (CNN-ED) to improve the signal-to-noise ratio in two-time correlation functions by effectively removing random noise and enhancing data quality.
  • The study shows that CNN-ED models trained on real experimental data can accurately extract critical parameters related to the sample's equilibrium dynamics despite the presence of statistical noise and dynamic heterogeneities.
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The addition of nanoparticles (NPs) to polymers is a powerful method to improve the mechanical and other properties of macromolecular materials. Such hybrid polymer-particle systems are also rich in fundamental soft matter physics. Among several factors contributing to mechanical reinforcement, a polymer-mediated NP network is considered to be the most important in polymer nanocomposites (PNCs).

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X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy (XPCS) microrheology and conventional bulk rheology were performed on silica nanoparticle dispersions associated with battery electrolyte applications to probe the properties of these specific complex materials and to explore the utility of XPCS microrheology in characterizing nanoparticle dispersions. Sterically stabilized shear-thickening electrolytes were synthesized by grafting poly(methyl methacrylate) chains onto silica nanoparticles. Coated silica dispersions containing 5-30 wt % nanoparticles dispersed in propylene carbonate were studied.

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Investigating the relationship between structure and dynamical processes is a central goal in condensed matter physics. Perhaps the most noted relationship between the two is the phenomenon of de Gennes narrowing, in which relaxation times in liquids are proportional to the scattering structure factor. Here, a similar relationship is discovered during the self-organized ion-beam nanopatterning of silicon using coherent x-ray scattering.

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3D printing of amorphous and crystalline ceramics is of paramount importance for the fabrication of a wide range of devices with applications across different technology fields. Printed ceramics are remarkably enabled by the sol-gel synthesis method in conjunction with continuous filament direct ink writing. During printing, multiple processes contribute to the evolution of inks including shape retention, chemical conversion, solidification, and microstructure formation.

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Complex fluids near interfaces or confined within nanoscale volumes can exhibit substantial shifts in physical properties compared to bulk, including glass transition temperature, phase separation, and crystallization. Because studies of these effects typically use thin film samples with one dimension of confinement, it is generally unclear how more extreme spatial confinement may influence these properties. In this work, we used x-ray photon correlation spectroscopy and gold nanoprobes to characterize polyethylene oxide confined by nanostructured gratings (<100nm width) and measured the viscosity in this nanoconfinement regime to be ∼500 times the bulk viscosity.

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Higher-order statistical analysis of X-ray scattering from dilute solutions of polydisperse goethite nanorods was performed and revealed structural information which is inaccessible by conventional small-angle scattering. For instance, a pronounced temperature dependence of the correlated scattering from suspension was observed. The higher-order scattering terms deviate from those expected for a perfectly isotropic distribution of particle orientations, demonstrating that the method can reveal faint orientational order in apparently disordered systems.

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Extrusion-based additive manufacturing methods, such as direct-write of carbon fiber-reinforced epoxy inks, have become an attractive route toward development of structural composites in recent years, because of emerging techniques such as big area additive manufacturing. The development of improved materials for these methods has been a major focus area; however, an understanding of the effects of the printing process on the structural and dynamic recovery in printed materials remains largely unexplored. The goal of this work is to capture multiscale and temporal morphology and dynamics within thermosetting composite inks to determine the parameters during the printing process that influence the recovery of the printed material.

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The properties of artificially grown thin films are strongly affected by surface processes during growth. Coherent X-rays provide an approach to better understand such processes and fluctuations far from equilibrium. Here we report results for vacuum deposition of C on a graphene-coated surface investigated with X-ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy in surface-sensitive conditions.

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Novel features of the longitudinal instability of a single electron bunch circulating in a low-emittance electron storage ring are discussed. Measurements and numerical simulations, performed both in time and frequency domain, show a non-monotonic increase of the electron beam energy spread as a function of single bunch current, characterized by the presence of local minima and maxima, where a local minimum of the energy spread is interpreted as a higher-order microwave instability threshold. It is also shown that thresholds related to the same zero-intensity bunch length depend linearly on the accelerating radio frequency voltage.

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Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) often includes an unwanted background, which increases the required measurement time to resolve the sample structure. This is undesirable in all experiments, and may make measurement of dynamic or radiation-sensitive samples impossible. Here, we demonstrate a new technique, applicable when the scattering signal is background-dominated, which reduces the requisite exposure time.

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A structural understanding of whole cells in three dimensions at high spatial resolution remains a significant challenge and, in the case of X-rays, has been limited by radiation damage. By alleviating this limitation, cryogenic coherent diffractive imaging (cryo-CDI) can in principle be used to bridge the important resolution gap between optical and electron microscopy in bio-imaging. Here, the first experimental demonstration of cryo-CDI for quantitative three-dimensional imaging of whole frozen-hydrated cells using 8 keV X-rays is reported.

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A new approach is proposed for measuring structural dynamics in materials from multi-speckle scattering patterns obtained with partially coherent X-rays. Coherent X-ray scattering is already widely used at high-brightness synchrotron lightsources to measure dynamics using X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy, but in many situations this experimental approach based on recording long series of images (i.e.

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The formation of self-assembled nanotubes is usually accounted for by anisotropic elastic properties of membranelike precursors. We present experimental data as evidence of the role played by electrostatics in the formation of self-assembled tubes in alkaline aqueous suspensions of lithocholic acid (LCA). Striking salt effects are characterized by comparing the rheological, dynamical, and scattering properties of systems prepared either in stoichiometric neutralization conditions (SC) of LCA or in a large excess of sodium hydroxide (EOC, experimentally optimized conditions) and finally, in two steps: stoichiometric neutralization followed by an appropriate addition of NaCl (AISC).

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X-ray diffraction microscopy (XDM) is well suited for nondestructive, high-resolution biological imaging, especially for thick samples, with the high penetration power of x rays and without limitations imposed by a lens. We developed nonvacuum, cryogenic (cryo-) XDM with hard x rays at 8 keV and report the first frozen-hydrated imaging by XDM. By preserving samples in amorphous ice, the risk of artifacts associated with dehydration or chemical fixation is avoided, ensuring the imaging condition closest to their natural state.

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The grazing incidence diffuse X-ray scattering out of the specular plane technique (GISAXS) is presented, and its capabilities are compared to the more classical X-ray specular reflectivity technique (XSR). Three experimental illustrations are given to prove the efficiency of GISAXS. First, the structure of a DPPC phospholipid monolayer is analyzed.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Arctic fish and amphibians produce cryo-protective substances to protect their cells from damage during freezing, and researchers replicated this by creating organic membranes using these substances as a base.
  • - The study involved cooling amphiphilic monolayers to -40 degrees C, which allowed scientists to explore new insights into membrane properties not previously accessible at such low temperatures.
  • - Findings showed that cooling these monolayers caused a transition from a mesophase with tilted molecular chains to a crystalline phase with upright chains, revealing a different alignment than the traditional herringbone structure.
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Adequate clay minerals considerably affect the macroscopic mechanical behavior of water even at concentrations of a few percent. Thus when 2 wt. % laponite clay mineral nanoparticles are added to water, the resulting colloidal suspension after some time takes on the semisolid characteristics of a jellylike material at room temperature.

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The kinetics and mechanism of the desorption of mineral clay particles originally adsorbed to a phospholipid monolayer has been studied. The desorption was induced by the injection of citric acid solution into the aqueous subphase. To follow the related kinetic processes, grazing incidence diffuse X-ray scattering out of the specular plane (GIXOS) was used with a remarkable time resolution of the order of one minute.

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The structural properties of Langmuir monolayers on aqueous substrates of a metal free phthalocyanine, 2,9,16,23-tetrakis(phenylthio)-29H,31H-phthalocyanine and an Aluminum centered phthalocyanine, Aluminum 2,9,16,23-tetrakis(phenylthio)-29H,31H-phthalocyanine chloride are reported here. Their structure is investigated under progressive lateral compression by grazing incidence diffuse X-ray scattering out of the specular plane to determine specular reflectivity-like information where the phase change of the molecules from "flat-lying" on the surface to "edge-standing" perpendicular to the surface was directly observed. Furthermore grazing incident X-ray diffraction is used to investigate the in-plane ordering of the system where it has been found that at high density states the systems can be considered as monolayers consisting of arrays of side-by-side cofacially aggregated cylindrical rodlike entities.

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