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Sep 12 – 15, 2017
CEBAF Center
US/Eastern timezone

Positron Annihilation Studies using a Superconducting Electron LINAC

Sep 13, 2017, 3:40 PM
35m
Room F113 (CEBAF Center)

Room F113

CEBAF Center

Jefferson Lab 12000 Jefferson Avenue Newport News, VA 23606
Oral Contribution Positron Applications Plenary 8

Speaker

Andreas Wagner (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf)

Description

The Helmholtz-Center at Dresden-Rossendorf operates several user beamlines for materials research using positron annihilation energy and lifetime spectroscopy. Two beamlines are being operated at a superconducting electron linear accelerator [1] producing hard X-rays from electron-bremsstrahlung and in turn generating positrons from pair production. Both installations employ bunched continuous-wave (CW) electron beams with energies between 15 MeV and 30 MeV. The CW-operation results in significantly reduced pile-up effects in the detectors in comparison to normal conducting accelerators. Electron bunch lengths below 10 ps FWHM allow positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy measurements with high timing resolutions. The bunch repetition rate is adjustable to 26 MHz / 2n, n=0, 1, 2 ... 16 matching wide spans in positron or positronium lifetimes. The GiPS (Gamma-induced Positron Source) generates energetic electron-positron pairs inside the sample under investigation from hard x-rays impinging onto the sample [2]. Therefore, the source is especially suited for materials which are not qualified for vacuum conditions or because they are imposing hazardous conditions or intrinsic radioactivity. Exemplary defect studies on the skyrmoin-lattice compound MnSi [3] will be presented. MePS (the Monoenergetic Positron Source) utilizes positrons with fixed energies ranging from 500 eV to 16 keV [4]. A magnetic beam transport system guides positrons to the samples under investigation. A dedicated chopper/buncher system is used to maintain a high timing resolution for depth-dependent annihilation lifetime studies in thin films. The signal-to-noise ratio is beyond 104 while lifetime resolutions of around 280 ps FWHM have been obtained. Applications of porosimetric studies in low-k dielectrics [5] and polymer brushes [6] will be presented. The MePS facility will be extended by an end-station called AIDA2 (Apparatus for in-situ Defect Analysis) where defect studies can be performed in a wide temperature range during thin film growth and ion irradiation. A similar setup named AIDA-1 is already in operation at a 22Na-based mono-energetic continuous positron beam [7] used for Doppler-broadening spectroscopy experiments [8,9]. The MePS facility has partly been funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) with the grant PosiAnalyse (05K2013). The initial AIDA system was funded by the Impulse- und Networking fund of the Helmholtz-Association (FKZ VH-VI-442 Memriox). The AIDA facility was funded through the Helmholtz Energy Materials Characterization Platform.

Primary author

Andreas Wagner (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf)

Co-authors

Mr Eric Hirschmann (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf) Dr Kay Potzger (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf) Dr Maciej Oskar Liedke (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf) Dr Maik Butterling (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf) Prof. Reinhard Krause-Rehberg (Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg)

Presentation materials