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Performance and First Results of the ELETTRA High-Flux Beamline for Small-Angle X-ray Scattering
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1997
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Optical MaterialsX-ray SpectroscopyElettra High-flux BeamlineEngineeringSmall-angle X-rayNew BeamlinePolycapillary OpticsNew Saxs BeamlineSynchrotron Radiation SourceX-ray ImagingSaxs ResolutionOptical PropertiesX-ray TechnologyHealth SciencesPhotonicsPhysicsSynchrotron RadiationParticle Beam PhysicsX-ray Free-electron LaserCrystallographyFirst ResultsX-ray DiffractionApplied PhysicsX-ray Optic
A new beamline for small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) has recently been constructed and is presently under final commissioning at the 2 GeV storage ring ELETTRA. It has been designed specifically for time-resolved studies of non-crystalline and fibrous materials and has been optimized for small-angle scattering measurements. The beamline operates with a SAXS resolution between 10 and about 1400 Å in d spacing (at 8 keV) and has been optimized with respect to high flux at the sample [of the order of 10 13 photons s −1 for 8 keV photons (2 GeV, 400 mA)]. Soon it will be possible to perform simultaneously wide-angle diffraction measurements in the d -spacing range 1.2–8 Å (at 8 keV). In order to allow time-resolved (resolution ~1 ms) small-angle scattering measurements, a high-power 57-pole wiggler is used as the beamline source. From its beam, one of three discrete energies, 5.4, 8 and 16 keV, can be selected with a double-crystal monochromator, which contains three pairs of asymmetrically cut plane Si(111) crystals. Downstream, the beam is focused horizontally and vertically by a toroidal mirror. Commissioning tests of this new SAXS beamline showed that all design parameters have been realized.