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Safety
First: New Personal Protective Equipment Policies
The ALS has been working to adapt Berkeley
Lab-wide policies regarding the use of personal protective
equipment (PPE) in laboratory areas for application to the
ALS's unique experimental areas. The result is a three-part
approach that designates certain technical areas and/or activities
for which various forms of PPE are required.
Red Floor. The first technical area consists
of all parts of the ALS experiment hall where the floor is painted
red. This encompasses essentially all space under the dome in
the facility, including the beamlines, accelerator tunnels, and
pit areas. The PPE requirements for this area are closed-toe
shoes and long pants or equivalent. Note that the nonpainted
perimeter walkway and the designated pedestrian walkway used
for tours are not covered by this requirement.
Yellow Border. In addition to the above requirement,
within the experiment hall, certain smaller, limited areas exist
where chemical and/or biological materials are used or stored.
This also includes areas where open containers of liquid nitrogen
may be found. These areas are identified by floor mats with a
yellow border. All individuals who enter these areas (i.e., step
on the floor mats) must wear proper eye protection (typically
safety glasses) in addition to the closed-toe shoes and long
pants.

Chemical use area at Beamline 6.3.1.
Liquid Nitrogen. Finally, when pressurized
liquid nitrogen cylinders are being manipulated, an environmental
hazard to the eyes exists. Regardless of where this work occurs,
anyone within a radius of 3 ft must wear safety glasses. This
is reinforced with signage at the cylinders. Note that this environmental
hazard does not exist when the cylinders are not being manipulated,
and safety glasses are not required just to walk past a stored
gas cylinder (such as exists at many loading docks, etc.).

Liquid nitrogen fill station.
Jim Floyd |
Bilayer
Graphene Gets a Bandgap
Graphene is the two-dimensional crystalline
form of carbon whose extraordinary electron mobility and other
unique features hold great promise for nanoscale electronics
and photonics. But without a bandgap, graphene's promise can't
be realized. As with monolayer graphene, bilayer graphene also
has a zero bandgap and thus behaves like a metal. But a bandgap
can be introduced if an electric displacement field is applied
to the two layers; the material then behaves like a semiconductor.
A team of researchers from Berkeley has engineered a bandgap
in bilayer graphene that can be precisely controlled from 0 to
250 meV. With precision control of its bandgap over a wide range,
plus independent manipulation of its electronic states through
electrical doping, dual-gated bilayer graphene becomes a remarkably
flexible tool for nanoscale electronic devices. Full
story.

Publication about this research: Y. Zhang,
T.-T. Tang, C. Girit, Z. Hao, M.C. Martin, A. Zettl, M.F. Crommie,
Y.R. Shen, and F. Wang, "Direct observation of a widely
tunable bandgap in bilayer graphene," Nature 459, 820 (2009).
Feng Wang |
Hybrid
Rotaxanes: Interlocked Structures for Quantum Computing?
Rotaxanes are mechanically interlocked molecular
architectures consisting of a dumbbell-shaped molecule, the "axle,"
that threads through a ring called a macrocycle. Because the
rings can spin around and slide along the axle, rotaxanes are
promising components of molecular machines. While most rotaxanes
have been entirely organic, the physical properties desirable
in molecular machines are mostly found in inorganic compounds.
Working together, two British groups at the University of Edinburgh
and the University of Manchester have bridged this gap with hybrid
rotaxanes, in which inorganic rings encircle the organic axles.
The hybrid architecture greatly increases their range of useful
physical properties, such as the magnetism based on molecular
magnets that may make them suitable as qubits for quantum computers. Full
story.

Publication about this research: C.-F. Lee,
D.A. Leigh, R.G. Pritchard, D. Schultz, S.J. Teat, G.A. Timco,
and R.E.P. Winpenny, "Hybrid organic-inorganic rotaxanes
and molecular shuttles," Nature 458, 314 (2009).
Richard Winpenny |
UEC
Corner: Users' Meeting, Poster Deadline, Awards, And Elections
ALS
USERS' MEETING: The 16th annual ALS Users' Meeting is October
15–17, 2009. This year's meeting will be held jointly with
The Molecular Foundry with a joint plenary, workshops, poster
session, and banquet.
9/25: Early-registration deadline
8/31: Poster abstract submission
deadline
8/31: Award Nomination
SPEAKERS: With an energy focus, this year's
plenary speakers are: Bill Brinkman, Harriet Kung, and Arun Majumdar.
Scientific highlights speakers are Pupa Gilbert (nacre), Mark
LeGros (bio-fuels), and two speakers from The Molecular Foundry
(TBD).
AWARDS:
Nominations for the Shirley (Science), Halbach (Instrumentation),
and Renner (Service) awards will be accepted until Monday, August
31, 2009. Nominators fill out a simple form, available at the
awards link above.
POSTERS: The deadline for poster abstract
submissions is also Monday, August 31, 2009. Students submitting
posters will compete for three awards, with the winner being
given an opportunity to speak at the Friday morning session.
UEC ELECTIONS: The ALS Users' Executive Committee
will be electing three new members and one student representative
this fall. Nominations will be accepted until October 15, 2009,
and voting will begin on October 16, 2009, on the second day
of the meeting. Nomination instructions are available at the
ALS UEC Web site, above.
We're looking forward to seeing you at the
meeting!
Ken Goldberg (UEC Chair)
Yayoi Takamura (Users' Meeting Co-Chair)
David Osborn (Users' Meeting Co-Chair) |
Guest
House to Begin Taking Reservations September 1
The Guest House at Berkeley Lab plans to open
its doors to users from October 1, 2009, and will be taking individual
reservations from September 1. The Guest House can be contacted
by
email. Inquiries sent before September 1 will receive an
automatic response with information about booking, and the potential
guest will be contacted after September 1.
Requests for a booking
should include the following information:
First/last name
Requested dates of stay
Number of guests
Room type: standard (1 queen or 2 twins), large (2 queens), or
studio (1 or 2 queens)
Address
Phone number
Sue Bailey |
Energy
Research Science Cafe on Thursday, August 27
The
ALS kicks off its Science Cafe series tomorrow in Room 2-100B at
12 noon. The Science Cafe, designed to give beamline scientists
the opportunity to present recent work to the ALS community in an
informal environment, will start with a focus on energy research
and technology. Featured this month is current work by staff
and users on bioenergy, CO2 sequestration, and advances
in solar-cell research. All are invited to attend and participate.
Liz Moxon |
ALS
Multimedia Stars Help Educate the Public
How do you explain the science at the ALS to
those without a science background? Emma Floyd, an undergraduate
journalism student, created two videos to try and answer that
question. "What
is the Advanced Light Source?" gives
a brief look at what the ALS is, who uses it, and how it works.
In "The
Big, The Small, and The ALS," viewers get an
idea of the scale of the science done at the ALS with a quick
look at some of the incredible numbers and measurements scientists
use daily.
Have you ever wanted to ask a scientist to
define a term in lay language? The Berkeley Lab Public Affairs
Department thought so, which is why—with the help of scientists
all over Berkeley Lab, including the ALS community—they have
put together a video
glossary, prominently featured
on the Lab's homepage. Among the terms defined are photons (Ben
Feinberg), synchrotron radiation (Mike Martin), protein crystallography
(Corie Ralston), surface science (Miquel Salmeron), and free-electron
laser (John Corlett). Entries are added each week, some of which
are prompted by viewer suggestions. |
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Operations |
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For the user runs
from July 14 to August 17, the beam reliability [(time scheduled
– time lost)/time scheduled)] was 97.2%. For this period, the
mean time between failures (MTBF) was 33.5 hours, and the mean
time to recovery (MTTR) was 56 minutes. There were no significant
interruptions. (This
period includes two-bunch operations from August 5–16.)
During this period, a new record was set for
continuous hours of light provided to users in a single week
of operation. For the period from July 14–19, 120 continuous
hours of light were provided to users in top-off mode without
any interruptions.
More detailed information on reliability is
available on the ALS reliability bulletin board, which is located
in the hallway between the ALS and the control room in Building
80. Questions about beam reliability should be directed to
David Richardson (x4376
).
Long-term and weekly operations
schedules are available here. Requests
for special operations use of the "scrubbing" shift
should be sent to Rick Bloemhard (ALS-CR@lbl.gov,
x4738) by 1:00 p.m. Friday. View the ring status in real time here. |
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