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D16 - Small momentum transfer diffractometer

D16 is a small momentum transfer diffractometer with variable vertical focusing, for the study of partially ordered structures such as stacked membranes or intercalated layers. The scattering geometry obtained with large, vertically oriented samples, profits the most from the large vertical cross section of the beam at the sample position. The instrument can also be used for small angle scattering and powder diffraction in an intermediate q-range (0.01-2.5 Å-1).

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Instrument description

Guide hall n°2, cold guide H53

horizontal cold source

beam tube

H5

neutron guide

H53 (120 x 60 mm2)

Focussing PG monochromator

7 verticaly bending PG(002) mosaic crystals d = 3.355 Å

area per element

17 x 80 mm2

total area

122 x 60 mm2

wavelength (take off)

4.7 Å (90°)
5.6 Å (115°)

mosaicity

0.7°

Beryllium filter

cooling

liquid nitrogen

cut-off

3.95 Å

path length

100 mm

efficiency

λ/2 < 0.1 %

Collimation

2 variable slits:

S1 (mono)

max. 150 x 40 mm2

S2 (sample)

max. 150 x 40 mm2

monochromator-to-
sample distance


2.8 m

Sample area

max flux at sample

107cm-2 s-1

typical sample size

30 x 10 mm2 (diffraction)
7 x 7 mm2 (HighRes SANS)

He detector (bidim 26)

distances

0.25 to 1.0 m

rotation

-5° < 2Θ <125°

area

256 x 256 mm2

resolution (pixel size)

2 x 2 mm2

max. counting rate

100 kHz (less than 1% dead time)

beamstop

variable size, typically 20 x 20 mm2
X/Y motorized

2-circle mode

sample rotation (Θ)

-180° ... +180° +/- 0.002°

detector rotation (2Θ)

-5° ... +130° +/- 0.01°

4-circle mode

sample rotation (Θ)

-180° ... +180°

sample rotation (φ)

-180° ... +180°

sample rotation (χ)

-180° ... +180°

D16 is a two-circle diffractometer that evolved from the first "biological membrane diffractometers" built in Brookhaven and Harwell in the early seventies. Its original specifications were defined for the study of structures of about 5 nm periodicity diffracting to a real space resolution of a fraction of nanometer. Because of its special characteristics, D16 remains unequalled for the study of a wide range of systems in biology, physics and physical chemistry. These include large unit-cell lamellar organisations such as membranes or clays, two-dimensional membrane and surface lattice structures, colloidal structures and magnetic systems.

 

The primary white beam is reflected by a focussing pyrolytic graphite monochromator providing an important flux at the sample. The monochromator housing has two beam holes at take-off angles of 90° and 115°, corresponding to 4.7 Å and 5.6 Å beams and incorporates the slit systems and cooled Beryllium filter in a way that optimises the beam optics within space and health physics constraints.

 

In the last decade D16 has undergone several major upgrades: in 1999 with a new design and the move from H16 to H17, in 2002 with a new 3He PSD and in 2007 with the move to H53. The design revisited in 2007 allows for much easier and rapid wavelength changes by simple rotation of the diffractometer around the monochromator axis.

 

Since 2006, a high-resolution SANS setup is used routinely in experiments requiring the 1% wavelength band width and the high angular resolution of the instrument.

 

The sample environment includes controlled temperature and humidity chambers, cryostats, furnaces, magnets, cryomagnets, high pressure cryostats, high pressure cells and an automatically positioned, temperature controlled horizontal sample changer.

 

In terms of Q-space and Q-resolution, D16 nicely fills the gap between the small angle instruments and classical diffractometers.