Complex Materials Scattering (CMS) Beamline at NSLS II: Recent Developments and Progress toward Autonomous Exploration of Material Structure
POSTER
Abstract
The CMS beamline at the National Synchrotron Light Source II provides small- and wide-angle x-ray scattering (SAXS/WAXS) capabilities for materials science community. Since 2017, CMS has been supporting user experiments involving a wide range of materials, from polymers, nanocomposites, liquid crystals, biomolecular materials, to self-assembled nanoparticle superlattices and lithographic nanostructures. To promote efficient exploration of material parameter spaces, CMS has implemented a variety of high-throughput and in-situ capabilities. Besides basic transmission and grazing-incidence (GI)SAXS/WAXS capabilities, CMS has demonstrated, and offers, technically demanding capabilities such as specular reflectivity, variable-angle methods (CD-SAXS/CD-GISAXS), and grazing-incidence scattering tomography. We will discuss these developments as well as our recent progress with implementing autonomous x-ray scattering experiments in which decision-making algorithms are integrated into a closed-loop beamline workflow pipeline.
*The CMS beamline is operated by NSLS II and CFN, which are U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facilities operated for the DOE Office of Science by Brookhaven National Laboratory under Contract No. DE-SC0012704.
Presenters
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Masafumi Fukuto
- Brookhaven National Laboratory
- National Synchrotron Light Source II, Brookhaven National Laboratory
- Brookhaven National Lab, Upton
- Brookhaven National Lab