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. 2016 Nov 1;23(Pt 6):1538-1549.
doi: 10.1107/S160057751601403X. Epub 2016 Oct 14.

XDS: a flexible beamline for X-ray diffraction and spectroscopy at the Brazilian synchrotron

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XDS: a flexible beamline for X-ray diffraction and spectroscopy at the Brazilian synchrotron

F A Lima et al. J Synchrotron Radiat. .

Abstract

The majority of the beamlines at the Brazilian Synchrotron Light Source Laboratory (LNLS) use radiation produced in the storage-ring bending magnets and are therefore currently limited in the flux that can be used in the harder part of the X-ray spectrum (above ∼10 keV). A 4 T superconducting multipolar wiggler (SCW) was recently installed at LNLS in order to improve the photon flux above 10 keV and fulfill the demands set by the materials science community. A new multi-purpose beamline was then installed at the LNLS using the SCW as a photon source. The XDS is a flexible beamline operating in the energy range between 5 and 30 keV, designed to perform experiments using absorption, diffraction and scattering techniques. Most of the work performed at the XDS beamline concentrates on X-ray absorption spectroscopy at energies above 18 keV and high-resolution diffraction experiments. More recently, new setups and photon-hungry experiments such as total X-ray scattering, X-ray diffraction under high pressures, resonant X-ray emission spectroscopy, among others, have started to become routine at XDS. Here, the XDS beamline characteristics, performance and a few new experimental possibilities are described.

Keywords: X-ray absorption; X-ray diffraction; beamline; resonant X-ray emission; total X-ray scattering.

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