Laboratoire Léon Brillouin

UMR12 CEA-CNRS, Bât. 563 CEA Saclay

91191 Gif sur Yvette Cedex, France

+33-169085241 llb-sec@cea.fr

BD diffusons les neutrons

DREAM (Diffraction Resolved by Energy and Angle Measurements)
logo_tutelle logo_tutelle logo_tutelle 

 

DREAM: A versatile powder diffractometer with single crystal capabilities

 

Brief description

DREAM is a time-of-flight diffractometer that is mainly dedicated to powder diffraction, but also offers single crystal capabilities. The science case of DREAM instrument is very wide - nuclear and magnetic structural studies of complex materials with large unit cells, in situ measurements or analyses of small samples - and the instrument will serve the ever-growing needs of various scientific communities.

DREAM layout
Figure 1: The layout of the DREAM instrument with the initial detector coverage of 1.82 sr.
The full scope instrument will have a layout of 5.12 sr, including a dedicated SANS detector.       
Copyright: Forschungszentrum Jülich.

 

DREAM's versatility is achieved by combining neutrons fluxes from both thermal and cold moderators in a bi-spectral instrument concept. At full detector coverage, the broad neutron bandwidth (3.6 Å) provides a Q-range of 0.01 – 25 Å–1 in a single frame, which is ideally suited for studies on multiple length scales by accessing several scattering techniques:  Small-Angle Neutron Scattering (SANS), Diffraction and Pair-Distribution Function (PDF).

DREAM is developed and built for ESS as an in-kind contribution from both Forschungszentrum Jülich (Germany) and Laboratoire Léon Brillouin (France) [1,2].

The people involved

 

F. Porcher (Scientist)

B. Annighöfer (Engineer)

S. Désert (Engineer)

G. Fabrèges (CAD designer)

 

M. Feygenson (Lead Scientist)

P. Harbott (Lead Engineer)

A. Poqué (Engineer)

A. Schwaab (Engineer)

W. Schweika (WP Coordinator)

 

A word on science

The science case of DREAM instrument focuses on the structure determination of complex materials with large unit cells, the studies of new compounds with an interplay of magnetism and superconductivity, nanostructures, metal organic frameworks, thermoelectrics, hydrogen storage and catalysis materials.

 

Detailed description

The design of DREAM takes advantage of the long pulse and unpreceded peak brightness of ESS to provide a flexible choice between high resolution and high intensity. The estimated highest resolution in the backscattering detector (d ~ 0.0003Å) will set a new world record in neutron diffraction. The pulse-shaping chopper consisting of two fast counter-rotating disks will allow a seamless change between the high resolution and high intensity modes of operation.

DREAM large 10B Jalousie detector.
Figure 2: The new 2D position sensitive 10B detectors of the DREAM instrument with the full detector coverage.
Copyright: Forschungszentrum Jülich

The new 2D position sensitive 10B detectors covers with high efficiency a large solid angle (initial coverage of 1.86 sr then 5.12 sr in the full coverage), and further enables neutron time-of-flight Laue single-crystal diffraction measurements. The future upgrades will include dedicated SANS detector, neutron polarization in forward scattering and dedicated high-pressure station.

Finally, the full potential of DREAM will be realized through a new approach to the data analysis based on 2D Rietveld refinements of the angular- and wavelength-dispersive diffraction data [3].

The DREAM construction proposal was accepted in 2014 [4]. In the beginning of 2017 the preliminary design review at ESS had set the initial scope and budget for the construction of the instrument.

 

Expected performance

Dream experimental area view 1

Dream experimental area view 2

     Figure 3: The experimental area of DREAM.  Copyright: Laboratoire Léon Brillouin CEA-CNRS.

 

I. Powder Diffraction is an integral part in chemistry, physics and material science research. The crystallographic studies of powders under various external conditions require a fast and robust neutron diffractometer.

The spacious area around sample position will allow DREAM to accommodate diverse samples environments, including low/high temperature, cryogenic magnets, high-pressure environment, and reactive gas and chemical reaction cells...

II. High Resolution neutron diffraction is a key feature of DREAM that would address a broad range of science cases. The high-resolution measurements are necessary for the crystallographic studies of large unit cell, magnetic, multi-phase and low symmetry materials. Examples include perovskites, textured polycrystalline ceramics, piezoelectrics, metal-organic frameworks and transition metal oxohalide compounds. DREAM shall achieve the world record resolution in the backscattering (Δd = 0.0003 Å near backscattering).

III. Pair-Distribution Function (PDF) measurements that enable the studies of the local crystal structure in crystalline materials will be possible on DREAM where maximum Qmax = 25 Å-1. This value is close to that routinely available at synchrotron on x-ray PDF instruments. It would allow studying, in particular, the local crystal structure of nanostructured materials. The position sensitive detectors of DREAM will open advances towards 3D PDF.

IV. In-Situ and Parametric Studies of the functional materials will play an important role in DREAM’s user program. The in-situ measurements of battery and super-capacitor materials under operating conditions are necessary for their performance optimization. The parametric studies are indispensable to unveil the competition between magnetic order and superconductivity in unconventional superconductors. Such phase diagram studies should also take a full advantage of DREAM’s sensitivity to weak signals (time resolution of ms for samples as large as 0.5 cm3).

V. Small Samples Measurements are in high demand, particularly in the battery and nanoscale communities as syntheses often yield only tens of milligrams of a sample, which presents a challenge for the neutron diffraction experiments. On DREAM, careful neutron beam collimation, evacuated flight path, new detector technology, possible polarization (after upgrade) should significantly reduce the instrument background and help to unveil weak signals from samples as small as 1 mm3.

VI. Time-of-Flight Laue Single-Crystal Neutron Diffraction is the ultimate option to uncover signals that are too weak to show up in powder diffraction (like, for example, subtle correlations between spins, orbitals, charge ordering and structural features). Thanks to its 2D large detector covering up to 5.12 sr, single crystal diffraction with unpolarized neutrons at DREAM will complement the polarized neutron measurements at the MAGIC instrument.

2D Diffraction
Figure 4: Simulations of 2D neutron diffraction pattern of Na2Ca3Al2F14 powder for DREAM instrument with complete detector coverage (left panel).
The right panel shows resolution for various pulse widths.              Copyright: Forschungszentrum Jülich

 

 

 

Partners pages

http://www-llb.cea.fr

http://www.fz-juelich.de/jcns/jcns-2/EN/Forschung/Instruments-for-ESS/Instruments/DREAM/_node.html

https://europeanspallationsource.se/instruments/dream

References and Links:

[1] DREAM publication

[2] ESS highlight of DREAM

[3] 2D Rietveld refinement

[4] DREAM instrument proposal

 
#2759 - Màj : 01/08/2018

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