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PROGRAM AND ABSTRACTS I 2018 APS/CNM USERS MEETING APS/CNM USERS MEETING 2018

2018 APS/CNM USERS MEETING · Kevin Jones, Argonne Guest House Chef, ... demonstration of a fast mechanical chopper for nuclear- ... emission principle,

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PROGRAM AND ABSTRACTS

i

2018 APS/CNM USERS MEETiNG

APS/CNM USERS MEETING2

018

User Facilities at Argonne National Laboratory

User Contacts

Advanced Photon Sourcehttp://www.aps.anl.gov

630-252-9090

[email protected]

Argonne Leadership Computing Facilityhttp://www.alcf.anl.gov

630-252-0929

Argonne Tandem Linac Accelerator Systemhttp://www.phy.anl.gov/atlas

630-252-4044

Center for Nanoscale Materials http://nano.anl.gov

630-252-6952

[email protected]

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PROGRAM AND ABSTRACTS

Table of Contents

Comprehensive Program .........................................................................................................................................................................1

General Session Abstracts ..................................................................................................................................................................... 11

Workshop Agendas and Abstracts ...................................................................................................................................................... 17

APS Workshop 1 Resolution@speed: Advanced X-ray Spectroscopies with Upgraded APS (APS_U) ................. 19

APS Workshop 2 Workshop on Past, Present, and Future of insertion Devices at the APS: A Tribute to Efim Gluskin, Emil Trakhtenberg, and isaac Vasserman ............................................. 21

CNM Workshop 3 Next-generation Quantum Systems Based on Topological Phases and integrated Quantum Photonics ....................................................................................................... 24

APS Workshop 4 Frontiers of Materials Research with Single-crystal Total Scattering ........................................... 28

APS/CNM Workshop 5 In Situ Rheology, SAXS, and XPCS for the Study of Soft Matter .................................................... 34

CNM Workshop 6 Tribology of 2D Materials: From Nanoscale to Macroscale ............................................................. 39

APS Workshop 7 High-resolution 3D X-ray imaging .......................................................................................................... 45

APS/CNM Workshop 8 Tipping X-ray – Comprehensive Nanoscale Characterization with Multimodal X-ray imaging ................................................................................................................ 52

CNM Workshop 9 Nanoscience for Quantum Science: Developing, Characterizing, and Harnessing Optically Active Defects ............................................................................................. 58

APS Workshop 10 Applications of Synchrotron X-ray Techniques for Studying Metal Additive Manufacturing ............................................................................................................................. 62

WKS User Workshop for Micromanipulator Use in Diamond Anvil Cell Loading and Other Applications ............................................................................................................................. 67

Poster Index ............................................................................................................................................................................................ 69

Poster Abstracts ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 79

APS Poster Abstracts ............................................................................................................................................................................. 81

CNM Poster Abstracts ..........................................................................................................................................................................113

ESRP Poster Abstracts .........................................................................................................................................................................129

Exhibitors/Sponsor ............................................................................................................................................................................... 137

General Information ..............................................................................................................................................................................171

Practical Matters ....................................................................................................................................................................................................173

Computer Access ..................................................................................................................................................................................................173

Exhibitor Location Map/Lower Gallery Level .................................................................................................................................................174

Exhibitor Location Map/Upper Atrium Level ................................................................................................................................................. 176

Schedule at a Glance ........................................................................................................................................................................................... 178

iii

2018 APS/CNM USERS MEETiNG

Acknowledgments

Overall Meeting Coordination:

Constance A. Vanni, APS

Katie Carrado Gregar, CNM

Scientific Program Coordinators:

Amy Clarke and Joe Kline for APS

Goran Karapetrov and James Rondinelli for CNM

APS User Organization Steering Committee

Amy Clarke

Colorado School of Mines (Chair)

R. Jospeh Kline

National Institute of Standards and Technology (Vice Chair)

Robert H. Coridan

University of Arkansas

Alexander F. Goncharov

Geophysical Laboratory, Carnegie Institution for Science

Andreas Kreyssig

Iowa State University

Nouamane Laanait

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Anne Marie March

Argonne National Laboratory

David C. Powers

Texas A&M University

Martina Ralle

Oregon Health & Science University

Renske van der Veen

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Yang Zhang

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Jason B. Benedict (ex officio)

State University of New York, Buffalo

CNM Users Executive Committee

Goran Karapetrov (Chair)

Drexel University

James Rondinelli (Vice-Chair)

Northwestern University

Renaud Bachelot

University of Technology of Troyes, France

Xuemei Cheng

Bryn Mawr College

Stephan Hruszkewycz

Argonne National Laboratory

Olga Makarova

Creatv MicroTech Inc.

CD Phatak

Argonne National Laboratory

Joshua Wood

MicroLink Devices, Inc.

Zhili Xiao

Northern Illinois University and Argonne National Laboratory

Yasuo ito (ex officio)

Northern Illinois University

Administrative Coordinators:

Jacki Flood, APS

Julie Emery, CNM

Tracey Stancik, CPA

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PROGRAM AND ABSTRACTS

The 2018 APS/CNM Users Meeting gratefully acknowledges its sponsor:

About Argonne National LaboratoryArgonne is a U.S. Department of Energy laboratory managed by the UChicago Argonne, LLC under

Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. The Laboratory is located southwest of Chicago at 9700 South Cass Avenue,

Lemont, illinois 60439. For information about Argonne, see www.anl.gov.

Deena Wright

General support

Linda Carlson

User elections, overall coordination, registration

Linda Conlin (BiS)

Production of program book

Kathy Dangles, Argonne Guest House

On-site logistics and amenities coordination

Jacki Flood

Site access and overall coordination

Kevin Jones, Argonne Guest House

Chef, menu design

Beverly Knott

General support

Jacquelin LeBreck (CPA)

General support

Melanie Matula

Reimbursements, travel arrangements, budget tracking, poster session, signage, web site

Amy Mikuta (FMS)

Building arrangements, site coordination

Michele Nelson and Laura Kivisto (CPA)

Design and production of program book

Dena Reetz (PMO)

On-site logistics and amenities coordination

Ed Russell

Building arrangements, site coordination

Becky Sikes

Site access

2018 Users Meeting Organizing Committee

V

2018 APS/CNM USERS MEETiNG

2018 Rosalind Franklin Award Joshua Riback(Biophysical Sciences, University of Chicago)

The APS Users Organization (APSUO) is pleased to

announce that the winner of the 2018 APSUO Rosalind

Franklin Young investigator Award is Joshua Riback,

a graduate student in the Biophysical Sciences at the

University of Chicago. Riback was recognized for his work

using small-angle x-ray scattering techniques (SAXS)

at the APS to study biophysical interactions.

Riback’s research focuses on the link between the

biophysical properties of macromolecules and the

principles of biological phenomena, such as subcellular

localization and compartmentalization, evolution, and

fitness. By focusing on how proteins respond to an

increase in temperature, Riback is working toward

understanding the breadth of mechanisms utilized in

the temperature-dependence and specificity of protein

assembly. Ultimately, the goal is to extrapolate these

mechanisms to other biological signals or stresses,

so as to develop our understanding of the physical basis

and cellular benefits of assembly.

Riback’s research has so far resulted in two ground-

breaking papers that utilized and advanced the application

of SAXS, using the BioCAT beamline at the APS. The

first is “Stress-triggered phase separation is an adaptive,

evolutionary tuned response,” (Riback et al., Cell 2017). in

it, Riback and the team demonstrated the reconstitution

of a physiologically relevant phase separation process

in vitro under physiological conditions, a first. Using SAXS

at the APS, his results connected the unusual biophysical

properties of a specific molecule to the cell’s capacity to

grow during stress, a major advance for the field.

The second paper, “innovative scattering analysis shows

that hydrophobic disordered proteins are expanded in

water” (Riback et al., Science 2017), developed a new

method to extract the dimensions of disordered proteins

and the strength of intra-protein interactions from a single

SAXS measurement. The information contained within

SAXS experiments is often difficult to extract. This is

especially true for polymers, including intrinsically

disordered proteins (iDPs), where data are fit with analytical

functions assuming a Gaussian random walk developed

decades ago. But by using the advantages provided by

the APS (namely, elimination of aggregates and improper

subtraction and high signal to noise as a result of the

high intensity of the APS)—coupled with advances in

computation—Riback and team developed a molecular

form factor (MFF) to quantify the properties of polymers

including size and shape.

Simply put, Riback’s analysis procedure resolves the

challenge of how to accurately extract gyration and

solvent quality for disordered proteins and polymers.

The application of Riback’s new analysis to a set of

three iDPs challenged the widely held view that the

unfolded states of proteins are collapsed globules under

physiological conditions. Although these three iDPs

have low-net charge and hydrophobicity typical of well-

folded proteins, each is highly expanded in the absence

of denaturant.

The combination of Riback’s high-data quality and new

analysis procedure were so strong that his publication was

accepted by Science on the first submission, and Riback’s

SAXS analysis method already is becoming the standard

in the field.

Riback received his bachelor’s degree in Biophysics from

The Johns Hopkins University. He is in the fifth-year of

graduate studies at University of Chicago’s Biophysical

Sciences Department.

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PROGRAM AND ABSTRACTS

About the Award in 2004, in conjunction

with the Advanced

Photon Source, the

APS Users Organization

established the APSUO

Rosalind Franklin Young

investigator Award to

recognize an important

scientific or technical

accomplishment by

a young investigator (senior graduate student or early

career Ph.D.) at, or beneficial to, the APS.

Rosalind Franklin was a brilliant chemist who played a

critical but largely unacknowledged role in the discovery

of the structure of DNA. While working as a research

associate for John Randall at King’s College in 1951,

Franklin was assigned to study the unwieldy DNA

molecule with x-ray crystallography—a technique only just

beginning to be used for biological molecules. Her results

revealed the position of the sugar-phosphate backbone

and the basic helical structure of the molecule; when her

x-ray photographs filtered unofficially to John Watson at

Cambridge, he immediately saw their implications. Franklin

went on to work on the tobacco mosaic virus and the polio

virus, but her career came to an untimely end when she

died of cancer in 1958 at age 37.

Previous award recipients

Alexis Templeton (2004)

Wendy Mao (2006)

Oleg G. Shpyrko (2008)

Rafael Jaramillo (2010)

Damian C. Ekiert (2012)

Julian Moosmann (2014)

Ling Li (2016)

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2018 APS/CNM USERS MEETiNG

In memory of Gopal K. Shenoy (1940–2017)

Dr. Gopal Shenoy was a Distinguished Senior Scientist at

Argonne, where he worked for 43 years. He was one of the

founders of the Advanced Photon Source.

His early career involved Mossbauer Spectroscopy with

pioneering work on magnetism and superconductivity in

uranium, neptunium, ytterbium, gadolinium, erbium, and

europium compounds. His work helped Argonne attract

new generations of scientists to develop a world leading

nuclear resonant scattering program. He was a strong

supporter and at times an active participant in nuclear

resonance experiments at the APS.

By mid 1980’s Dr. Shenoy seized a historic opportunity

and pushed for an insertion-device based synchrotron

light source. His enthusiasm was matched by that of

Dr. Yanglai Cho, and working together, they developed a

low-emittance lattice storage ring design with 35 undulator

sources. Starting in 1987, his attention, and that of Dr. David

Moncton, the first Director of the APS, was directed to the

detailed design and construction of the Advanced Photon

Source, as well as to creating a healthy national scientific

user community.

in the early 2000’s, after leaving his APS management

position, Gopal turned to novel experimental development

issues. His constant enthusiasm contributed to the first

demonstration of a fast mechanical chopper for nuclear-

resonant x-ray scattering studies.

Gopal Shenoy always had an eye on the future. As early as

1995, he was working on laser-based x-ray light sources.

The first demonstration of the self-amplified spontaneous

emission principle, with laboratory leaders such as David

Moncton, Efim Gluskin, John Galayda, Michael Borland,

and Stephen Milton, paved the way for x-ray free-electron

lasers in the world today.

Gopal Shenoy proved time and again that he could

connect to young researchers, support their work, fire their

enthusiasm, challenge their ideas, and encourage them to

publish their work.

Viii

PROGRAM AND ABSTRACTS

The 2018 Gopal K. Shenoy Excellene in Beamline Science Award Hua Zhou(Advanced Photon Source Argonne National Laboratory)

The 2018 Gopal K. Shenoy Excellence in Beamline Science

Award was awarded on May 7th, 2018, to Hua Zhou, a

physicist in the Surface Scattering and Microdiffraction

Group of X-Ray Sciences Division at the APS.

The award recognizes Zhou’s pioneering work in the

field of synchrotron radiation studies of complex oxide

heterostructures, using various sectors of the APS. Zhou

is a world-recognized leader in performing hard x-ray

surface and interface studies and in promoting the use

of hard x-ray techniques for versatile thin film materials,

in particular for oxide investigation. As an expert in the

analysis of Coherent Bragg Rod Analysis (COBRA), Zhou

has advanced the method to allow for different crystal

structures and symmetries and introduced an effective

way to account for statistical error. in addition, he has

developed a vibrant research program at the APS focused

on in situ x-ray studies of electrolyte ionic gating for

multifunctional oxides. His discoveries have been essential

to gaining a fundamental understanding of how these

ionic-lattice-electronic couplings work in different energy

efficient electronics and energy conversion technologies.

Zhou’s science program has resulted in more than

60 publications since 2013. He has demonstrated

sustained commitment to the APS user community by

the education, training, and mentoring of undergraduate,

graduate students, and postdocs from global backgrounds.

He has organized and chaired various symposia and

workshops on promoting surface x-ray capabilities of the

APS in domestic and international conferences.

About the Award This APSUO award

recognizes beamline

scientists who have

made significant scientific

contributions in their

area of research or

instrumentation

development and have

promoted the user

community in this area.

The award was renamed in 2017 in honor of the late

Gopal K. Shenoy, one of the key players in the inception of

the APS and a world renown materials scientist. Gopal was

always a huge supporter of the facility’s scientists and truly

enjoyed working with them. The inaugural Gopal K. Shenoy

Excellence in Beamline Science Award will be presented at

the 2018 APS/CNM Users Meeting.

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2018 APS/CNM USERS MEETiNG