Broad use in science and industry
The unique properties of SR, including its high brilliance, wide spectral range and wavelength/energy tunability, provide it with remarkable analytical capabilities for the characterization of materials. Combined with the various modes of photon-matter interactions, SR offers a wide range of techniques and methodologies, including:
- chemical analysis, such as elemental composition, chemical speciation and coordination site analysis of the absorbing atom, as well as identification of molecular groups and structures;
- structural analysis to understand the modifications induced to crystalline of heterogeneous materials by means of X-ray diffraction, small angle X-ray scattering and X-ray reflectometry;
- investigation of electronic and magnetic properties of surfaces, thin films and buried interfaces using a variety of techniques such as soft X-ray emission, photoemission electron microscopy, angular resolved photoemission spectroscopy, low energy electron microscopy and X-ray magnetic circular dichroism; and
- morphological characterization, which refers to the visualization in two or three dimensions of the very fine details of complex structures by means of micro- and phase-contrast computed tomography.
These capabilities have allowed Synchrotron Radiation applications to expand in a wide range of scientific disciplines: materials science; energy research; protein crystallography; environmental science; chemistry; life or biosciences; microelectronics; geological sciences including extra-terrestrial matter studies; and paleo-environmental analysis. It is also used widely across the industry, from pharmaceutical and biotechnology to the production of cars, semi-conductors and cosmetics. Lately, energy storage and conversion has joined the list, in the form of micro- and nano-scaled heterogeneous materials such as batteries, fuel cells, photovoltaics and organic semiconductors.
Free Electron Laser sources are utilized to study the properties of condensed matter; nanomaterials; molecular and atomic processes; and biological systems. In particular, femtosecond X-ray pulses generated at FELs are used for single-bunch timing experiments that are able to unlock exotic research capabilities into the ultrafast and high resolution scale of molecular and atomic dynamic processes.
A global list of synchrotron radiation sources can be found on the IAEA's Accelerator Knowledge Portal.