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CHESS and CLASSE scientists take part in Expanding Your Horizons 2023

The 2023 EYH conference took place on April 1st and consisted of speakers, workshops, demonstrations, and lab tours geared towards motivating young scientists to get involved in STEM. Students participate in two or three workshops organized by Cornell students and faculty, tour state-of-the-art lab facilities on Cornell’s Ithaca campus, connect with peers and mentors, and learn that anyone with a curious mind has what it takes to pursue a future in STEM!

  • Read more about CHESS and CLASSE scientists take part in Expanding Your Horizons 2023

Structural evolution of the kagome superconductors through charge density wave order

A new paper appearing in Physical Review Materials, by a team from UCSB, Argonne National Lab, and Cornell, sheds new light on the structural evolution of kagome superconductors during CDW formation.
Tags
CHEXS
QM2
  • Read more about Structural evolution of the kagome superconductors through charge density wave order

Using real-time data analysis to conduct next-generation synchrotron fatigue studies

What is the discovery?

Tags
CHEXS
FAST
  • Read more about Using real-time data analysis to conduct next-generation synchrotron fatigue studies

How a Record-Breaking Copper Catalyst Converts CO2 Into Liquid Fuels

Since the 1970s, scientists have known that copper has a special ability to recycle carbon dioxide into valuable chemicals and fuels. But for many years, scientists have struggled to understand how this common metal works as an electrocatalyst, a mechanism that uses energy from electrons to chemically transform molecules into different products.

  • Read more about How a Record-Breaking Copper Catalyst Converts CO2 Into Liquid Fuels

Cornell-led Team Selected for National Science Foundation's Convergence Accelerator

A team of collaborators from the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source (CHESS), Cornell’s College of Engineering, Rochester Institute of Technology, Australia’s CSIRO and Industry have been selected to participate in the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Convergence Accelerator, a program that supports interdisciplinary research solving societal challenges.

  • Read more about Cornell-led Team Selected for National Science Foundation's Convergence Accelerator

Inline small-angle X-ray scattering-coupled chromatography under extreme hydrostatic pressure

What is the discovery?

Tags
CHEXS
macchess
biosaxs
  • Read more about Inline small-angle X-ray scattering-coupled chromatography under extreme hydrostatic pressure

The influence of Alloying on slip intermittency and the implications for dwell fatigue in titanium

The high precision of HEDM measurements at FAST offer new insight into the microscopic processes that cause dwell fatigue, pointing toward new alloying strategies for mitigation.
Tags
FAST
CHEXS
  • Read more about The influence of Alloying on slip intermittency and the implications for dwell fatigue in titanium

A New Robotic Arm at the Structural Materials Beamline

SMB is one of two beamlines at the Materials Solutions Network at CHESS (MSN-C) providing critical infrastructure in support of materials research for the U.S. Department of Defense. SMB is optimized for the study of structural materials – materials that can sustain a load or withstand an impact such as engineering alloys and composites.

  • Read more about A New Robotic Arm at the Structural Materials Beamline

Alongside enormous construction project, CHESS restarts to deliver beam to users.

Throw in a $28M construction project and a few routine upgrades, and there are bound to be more challenges, particularly unearthing a portion of the storage ring and tapping three new beamline holes into the Cornell Electron Storage Ring, CESR. These three new connections - and the large construction project they accompany - are all part of the New Experimental Hall. This ongoing construction project at Wilson Lab will house the High Magnetic Field Beamline and up to four additional beamlines.

Tags
HMF
  • Read more about Alongside enormous construction project, CHESS restarts to deliver beam to users.

Turning Heroic Efforts Into Everyday Experiments

The challenge now is to efficiently use these expensive techniques - and the enormous datasets they produce - to better understand existing problems and gain insight into new phenomena that have been previously unreachable.

CHESS has been at the heart of this explosive growth, and will now develop new, efficient experimental and data processing protocols for using these techniques. 

"Drowning in Data"

Tags
MSN-C
FAST
  • Read more about Turning Heroic Efforts Into Everyday Experiments

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