• About us
  • Contact
Friday, June 2, 2023
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
Times Of Nation
-18 °c
  • Top Stories
  • Genetics
  • Environment
  • Wildlife
  • Outer space
    See Mars buzz the dense stars of the Beehive Cluster tonight

    See Mars buzz the dense stars of the Beehive Cluster tonight

    Watch Mars livestream from European Red Planet orbiter today

    Watch Mars livestream from European Red Planet orbiter today

    World’s 1st ‘hacking sandbox’ satellite and more to ride on SpaceX’s next NASA cargo launch

    World’s 1st ‘hacking sandbox’ satellite and more to ride on SpaceX’s next NASA cargo launch

    A poem for Europa Clipper: US Poet Laureate Ada Limón reveals ode to fly on NASA Jupiter moon mission

    A poem for Europa Clipper: US Poet Laureate Ada Limón reveals ode to fly on NASA Jupiter moon mission

    Boeing delays 1st Starliner astronaut launch for NASA indefinitely over parachute, wiring safety issues

    Boeing delays 1st Starliner astronaut launch for NASA indefinitely over parachute, wiring safety issues

    Technical snags force another delay for Boeing’s Starliner crew capsule – Spaceflight Now

    Technical snags force another delay for Boeing’s Starliner crew capsule – Spaceflight Now

    These New Computer Simulations of the Sun are Hypnotic

    These New Computer Simulations of the Sun are Hypnotic

    NASA Invites Public to Sign Poem That Will Fly Aboard Europa Clipper

    NASA Invites Public to Sign Poem That Will Fly Aboard Europa Clipper

    NASA’s Kepler telescope discovered 2 mini-Neptune exoplanets just before dying

    NASA’s Kepler telescope discovered 2 mini-Neptune exoplanets just before dying

  • Physics
    Ultrafast terahertz emission from emerging symmetry-broken materials

    Ultrafast terahertz emission from emerging symmetry-broken materials

    Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning

    Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning

    Thorium-229: How the first nuclear transition can be excited with lasers in the visible wavelength range

    Thorium-229: How the first nuclear transition can be excited with lasers in the visible wavelength range

    Trending Tags

    • geophysics
    • quantum
    • physicists
    • physiology
    • physical
    • holography
  • Top Stories
  • Genetics
  • Environment
  • Wildlife
  • Outer space
    See Mars buzz the dense stars of the Beehive Cluster tonight

    See Mars buzz the dense stars of the Beehive Cluster tonight

    Watch Mars livestream from European Red Planet orbiter today

    Watch Mars livestream from European Red Planet orbiter today

    World’s 1st ‘hacking sandbox’ satellite and more to ride on SpaceX’s next NASA cargo launch

    World’s 1st ‘hacking sandbox’ satellite and more to ride on SpaceX’s next NASA cargo launch

    A poem for Europa Clipper: US Poet Laureate Ada Limón reveals ode to fly on NASA Jupiter moon mission

    A poem for Europa Clipper: US Poet Laureate Ada Limón reveals ode to fly on NASA Jupiter moon mission

    Boeing delays 1st Starliner astronaut launch for NASA indefinitely over parachute, wiring safety issues

    Boeing delays 1st Starliner astronaut launch for NASA indefinitely over parachute, wiring safety issues

    Technical snags force another delay for Boeing’s Starliner crew capsule – Spaceflight Now

    Technical snags force another delay for Boeing’s Starliner crew capsule – Spaceflight Now

    These New Computer Simulations of the Sun are Hypnotic

    These New Computer Simulations of the Sun are Hypnotic

    NASA Invites Public to Sign Poem That Will Fly Aboard Europa Clipper

    NASA Invites Public to Sign Poem That Will Fly Aboard Europa Clipper

    NASA’s Kepler telescope discovered 2 mini-Neptune exoplanets just before dying

    NASA’s Kepler telescope discovered 2 mini-Neptune exoplanets just before dying

  • Physics
    Ultrafast terahertz emission from emerging symmetry-broken materials

    Ultrafast terahertz emission from emerging symmetry-broken materials

    Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning

    Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning

    Thorium-229: How the first nuclear transition can be excited with lasers in the visible wavelength range

    Thorium-229: How the first nuclear transition can be excited with lasers in the visible wavelength range

    Trending Tags

    • geophysics
    • quantum
    • physicists
    • physiology
    • physical
    • holography
No Result
View All Result
Times Of Nation
No Result
View All Result
bayan çanta
Home Physics

Solving a crystal’s structure when you’ve only got powder: A new mathematical technique enormously expands the power of x-ray crystallography

by TimesOfNation
January 24, 2022
in Physics
Solving a crystal’s structure when you’ve only got powder: A new mathematical technique enormously expands the power of x-ray crystallography
1
SHARES
9
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Solving a crystal’s structure when you’ve only got powder- A new mathematical technique enormously expands the power of x-ray crystallography- Times Of Nation

Crystals reveal the hidden geometry of molecules to the naked eye. Scientists use crystals to figure out the atomic structure of new materials, but many can’t be grown large enough. Now, a team of researchers report a new technique in the January 19 issue of Nature that can discover the crystalline structure of any material.

To truly understand a chemical, a scientist needs to know how its atoms are arranged. Sometimes that’s easy- for example, both diamond and gold are made of a single kind of atom (carbon or gold, respectively) arranged in a cubic grid. But often it’s harder to figure out more complicated ones.

“Every single one of these is a special snowflake — growing them is really difficult,” says UConn chemical physicist Nate Hohman. Hohman studies metal organic chacogenolates. They’re made of a metal combined with an organic polymer and an element from column 16 of the periodic table (sulfur, selenium, tellurium or polonium.) Some are brightly colored pigments; others become more electrically conductive when light is shined on them; others make good solid lubricants that don’t burn up in the high temperatures of oil refineries or mines.

It’s a large, useful family of chemicals. But the ones Hohman studies — hybrid chalcogenolates — are really difficult to crystallize. Hohman’s lab couldn’t solve the atomic structures, because they couldn’t grow large perfect crystals. Even the tiny powdered crystals they could get were imperfect and messy.

X-ray crystallography is the standard way to figure out the atomic arrangements of more complicated materials. A famous, early example was how Rosalind Franklin used it to figure out the structure of DNA. She isolated large, perfect pieces of DNA in crystalline form, and then illuminated them with x-rays. X-rays are so small they diffract through the spaces between atoms, the same way visible light diffracts through slots in metal. By doing the math on the diffraction pattern, you can figure out the spacing of the slots — or atoms — that made it.

Once you know the atomic structure of a material, a whole new world opens up. Materials scientists use that information to design specific materials to do special things. For example, maybe you have a material that bends light in cool ways, so that it becomes invisible under ultraviolet light. If you understand the atomic structure, you might be able to tweak it — substitute a similar element of a different size in a specific spot, say — and make it do the same thing in visible light. Voila, an invisibility cloak!

Hybrid chalcogenolates, the compounds Hohman studies, won’t make you invisible. But they might make excellent new chemical catalysts and semiconductors. Currently he’s working with ones based on silver. His favorite, mithrene, is made of silver and selenium and glows a brilliant blue in UV light or “whenever grad students are around,” Hohman says.

Elyse Schreiber, a chemistry graduate student in Hohman’s lab, convinced Hohman they should try illuminating some of the small, messy hybrid chalcogenolates in a high powered x-ray beam anyway. If they could figure out the math, it would solve all their problems.

While working at the Linac Coherent Light Source at the SLAC linear accelerator in Menlo Park, California, Schreiber met Aaron Brewster, a researcher at Berkeley. Brewster mentioned he’d solved the math required to solve the crystal structure of difficult materials using X-ray crystallography. But he needed something to test it on. Hohman and Schreiber had the material. They provided plenty of tiny, imperfect chalcogenolate crystals, which they mixed into water emulsified with Dawn dish soap (another indispensable item in Hohman’s lab that glows blue) and shot jets of them into the accelerator beam. Each X-ray pulse illuminated the crystals incredibly brightly, allowing Brewster to capture a snapshot of the atomic structures of hundreds of tiny crystals. With enough snapshots, Brewster was able to run the calculations and figure out how the atoms were arranged.

Not only did they solve the crystal structures — they also figured out that the previous best guesses of what those structures were had been wrong. In theory, the technique, called small-molecule serial femtosecond crystallography, or smSFX, can be used for any chemical or material.

Computer scientists Nicolas Sauter and Daniel Paley at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory also helped develop smSFX. When you have a true powder, Paley explains, it’s like having a million crystals that are all jumbled together, full of imperfections, and scrambled in every possible orientation. Rather than diffracting the whole jumble together and getting a muddied readout of electron densities, like existing powder diffraction techniques, smSFX is so precise that it can diffract individual grains, one at a time. “This gives it a special sharpening effect,” he said. “So that is actually the kind of secret sauce of this whole method. Normally you shoot all million at once, but now you shoot 10,000 all in sequence,” Paley says.

“There is a huge array of fascinating physical and even chemical dynamics that occur at ultrafast timescales and this technique could help us to understand how these dynamic events affect the structure of microcrystalline materials. In a way, connecting the dots between a material’s structure and its function,” Schreiber elaborates. Hohman is equally excited about their success.

“Now that we can solve these hard to crystallize structures, we can design the best” structures for our purposes, Hohman says. Often, a material will come close to having a certain desirable property, but its crystalline structure won’t be quite right. Hohman hopes that with the data they can get from X-ray crystallography using Brewster’s technique, they can design better materials from the ground up.

Now, Hohman and Brewster are collaborating with Tess Smidt, a machine learning specialist at MIT, to try to teach a computer to design materials with specific properties. The Department of Energy recently awarded the team a $15 million grant to pursue this and two other projects.

This work involved the use of the SACLA free-electron laser in Japan, the Linac Coherent Light Source at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, and the Molecular Foundry and National Energy Research Scientific Computing Centers, U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science user facilities located at Berkeley Lab.

(News Source -Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Times Of Nation staff and is published from a www.sciencedaily.com feed.)

RelatedArticles

Ultrafast terahertz emission from emerging symmetry-broken materials

Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning

Thorium-229: How the first nuclear transition can be excited with lasers in the visible wavelength range

Read Also- Latest News | Current Affairs News | Today News | English News | World News Today

TimesofNation.com offer news and information like- English newspaper today | today English news | English news live | times India | today news in English in India | breaking news in India today | India TV news today & Hindustan News.

You can Read on TimesofNation.com latest news today, breaking news headlines, Top news. Discover national and international news on economy, politics, defence, sports, world news & other relatively current affair’s news.

Tags: crystallographycrystalsenormouslyexpandsMaterials Science; Physics; Chemistry; Inorganic Chemistry; Mathematics; Educational Technology; Computer Modeling; Distributed ComputingMathematicalpowderpowerSolvingstructuretechniqueXrayyouve
Plugin Install : Subscribe Push Notification need OneSignal plugin to be installed.
TimesOfNation

TimesOfNation

Related Posts

Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning

Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning

by TimesOfNation
June 2, 2023
1

Accelerating nanoscale X-ray imaging of integrated circuits with machine learning- Times Of Nation (A) Synchrotron X-ray ptychographic tomography is a...

New technique could probe the heart of powerful solar storms

New technique could probe the heart of powerful solar storms

by TimesOfNation
June 1, 2023
4

New technique could probe the heart of powerful solar storms: Times Of Nation Scientists may have found a way to...

Scientists’ report world’s first X-ray of a single atom

Scientists’ report world’s first X-ray of a single atom

by TimesOfNation
May 31, 2023
2

Scientists' report world's first X-ray of a single atom- Times Of Nation When X-rays (blue color) illuminate onto an iron...

New high resolution X-ray imaging technique can image biological specimens without causing damage

New high resolution X-ray imaging technique can image biological specimens without causing damage

by TimesOfNation
May 31, 2023
5

New high resolution X-ray imaging technique can image biological specimens without causing damage- Times Of Nation From left to right-...

Hungry black hole shoots out bright X-ray jet 60,000 times hotter than the sun

Hungry black hole shoots out bright X-ray jet 60,000 times hotter than the sun

by TimesOfNation
May 30, 2023
4

Hungry black hole shoots out bright X-ray jet 60,000 times hotter than the sun: Times Of Nation Astronomers stared deep...

The universe looks amazing in new photos from the James Webb Space Telescope and famed X-ray observatory

The universe looks amazing in new photos from the James Webb Space Telescope and famed X-ray observatory

by TimesOfNation
May 26, 2023
4

The universe looks amazing in new photos from the James Webb Space Telescope and famed X-ray observatory: Times Of Nation...

Next Post
Inner workings of quantum computers: Gate set tomography used to discover and validate two innovations

Inner workings of quantum computers: Gate set tomography used to discover and validate two innovations

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Recommended

Unlock Sustainability Goals for the Farm to Fork Model: Murali Manohar, Senior Director and General Manager, India Subcontinent, Infor

Unlock Sustainability Goals for the Farm to Fork Model: Murali Manohar, Senior Director and General Manager, India Subcontinent, Infor

9 months ago
1

Social Alpha Joins Hands with H&M Foundation and JSW Foundation to Support Innovations in Waste Management

1 year ago
18

Popular News

  • How disinfecting an old mineshaft saved a colony of little brown bats

    How disinfecting an old mineshaft saved a colony of little brown bats

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • PM Modi has given honest, corruption-free governance in 9 years, says Anurag Thakur

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Coal India OFS opens for retail investors today; non-retail issue oversubscribed 3.46x at Rs 6,500 cr on Day 1

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Hubble captures starry tentacles of faraway ‘jellyfish galaxy’ in stunning detail (photo)

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Saturn’s moon Enceladus is blasting a plume of water 6,000 miles high. Could life be lurking under its icy shell?

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

About

Times Of Nation

timesofnation.com is a dedicated news website for core sciences, technology, medical research and health news along with current affairs coverage from India. the timesofnation.com website is one of the fast growing online communities for science-minded people....Read more

Category

  • Business News
  • Environment
  • Genetics
  • India
  • Outer space
  • Physics
  • Wildlife

Site Links

  • Corrections Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

Contact Us

Email us to send your suggestions
editor[@]timesofnation.com
Send articles and news to editor[@]timesofnation.com
For other enquiries: admin[@]timesofnation.com
If you find any content violating the editorial code of conduct mail to editor[@]timesofnation.com.

  • Corrections Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

© 2021 Times of Nation. All rights reserved.

ankara escort çankaya escort çankaya escort escort bayan çankaya istanbul rus escort eryaman escort ankara escort kızılay escort istanbul escort ankara escort ankara escort escort ankara istanbul rus Escort atasehir Escort beylikduzu Escort Ankara Escort malatya Escort kuşadası Escort gaziantep Escort izmir Escort
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Genetics
  • Environment
  • Wildlife
  • Outer space
  • Physics

© 2021 Times of Nation. All rights reserved.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.