P07 - Engineering Materials (Hereon)

The High Energy Materials Science Beamline HEMS at PETRA III satisfies high energy X-ray diffraction and imaging techniques. It is tunable in the range 30 to 200 keV, and it is optimized for micrometer focusing with Compound Refractive Lenses (CRLs). In-house and development activities are shared between Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon (formerly Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht) and DESY. Hereon is focusing on engineering materials science applications with two experimental hutches.

HEMS has partly been operational since summer 2010. Regular user operation started June 2011, the last dedicated instrumentation (3D-XRD grain mapping) has been commissioned end of 2013.


The materials and general science activities are threefold:

  1. Fundamental research encompasses metallurgy, physics, chemistry, biology etc. which are more and more merging. Experiments had been done for the investigation of the relation between macroscopic and micro-structural properties of polycrystalline materials, grain-grain-interactions, recrystallisation processes, the development of new & smart materials or processes, and in situ catalysis mechanisms. Generally, all kinds of matter can be studied with high precision, high stability and low background: surfaces, interfaces, bulk single crystals, powders as well as amorphous materials in a large reciprocal space. Optics for the study of liquid surfaces are also available.

  2. Applied research for manufacturing process optimization benefits from high flux in combination with fast detector systems allowing complex and highly dynamic in-situ studies of microstructural transformations, e.g. during welding and loading processes. The beamline infrastructure allows easy accommodation of large user provided equipment (e.g. an in-situ friction stir welding device, a laser beam welding chamber built in-house by Hereon).

  3. Experiments targeting the industrial user community are based on well established techniques with standardised evaluation, allowing "full service" measurements. Environments for strain mapping on large structural components up to 1 t are provided as well as automated investigations of large sample numbers, e.g. for tomography & texture determination.

After a first workshop in June 2006 in order to address the future user community and a second workshop in November 2007 in order to optimize the optics concept, the final design for the beamline (P07 in sector 5 of the PETRA III Max von Laue Hall, 47c), consists of a 4.5 m long in-vacuum undulator source IVU21 (finally installed in spring 2019), the main optics hutch OH1, an in-house test facility (EH1) (Hereon) and three independent experimental hutches EH2 (DESY), EH3 and EH4 (Hereon) working alternatively, plus additional focussing optics hutches OH2 (DESY) and OH3 (Hereon) with set-up and storage space for long-term experiments as sketched in the picture.


Since June 2011 the experimental hutches EH2 with OH2 and EH3 with OH3 had been available for reviewed user experiments. EH4 with its micro-tomography set-up was commissioned in 2012 (absorption) and 2013 (phase contrast), its mapper set-up in the second half of 2013. The Test Facility EH1 is not available for external users.


Schell
Norbert Schell
E-Mail: Norbert Schell
Phone: +49 (0)40 8998 3637
Location: 47c / L127
Beamline Scientist in Charge
Useful links
Poster at SNI 2006
30 June 2006
Poster at MECASENS IV 2007
02 November 2007
Poster at SRI 2009
SRI-2009 Proceedings Melbourne
PETRA III undulators
HEMS in-vacuum undulator
Beamline Layout