Soft X-Ray Scattering from Hard and Soft Matter
September 30, 2005
Building 66 Auditorium, Berkeley Lab

Sponsored by the Advanced Light Source and the Molecular Foundry, Berkeley Lab

 

 

 

   


Workshop Scope

Resonant soft x-ray scattering has emerged as a powerful tool to study nanometer scale structure and functionality in a broad range of magnetic and other hard-condensed matter systems, and is emerging with unique capabilities to study compositional heterogeneity in soft matter. These capabilities result primarily from the sharp core resonances of many elements in the 250 – 2500 eV range, whose high sensitivity to bonding and spin-resolved electronic structure means that heterogeneity in these properties yields strong contrast in scattering measurements with spatial resolution down to half of the wavelength. Such sensitivity to chemical and functional structural organization will be valuable to research projects at the Molecular Foundry as well as to the broader scientific community, and yet instrumentation to fully exploit these capabilities is lacking. This workshop will develop the scientific case for a dedicated undulator-based soft x-ray scattering facility at the ALS to study structural organization in a broad range of nanostructured matter.

NOTE: There is no charge to attend this workshop, but all attendees must register so that adequate space and refreshments are provided. Registering is necessary for visitors from outside Berkeley Lab who do not hold a valid badge to provide all need information to avoid delays at the gate.

Some time is reserved for short (5-10 minute), self-nominated presentations.  These presentations must identify important scientific problems whose understanding may be impacted by soft x-ray scattering.  Contact the organizers listed on the bottom of these pages if you are interested in making a short presentation.

 

       
     

Meeting organizers:

Harald Ade (North Carolina State University)
Jefrey Bokor (Molecular Foundry, Berkeley Lab)
Jeff Kortright (Materials Science Division, Berkeley Lab)