Synchrotron SOLEIL IPANEMA, Gif-sur-Yvette, FR 
Program: FIXLAB the platforms of European large and medium scale facilities – PLATFORM AAccess Provider: SOLEIL IPANEMA Institut Photonique d’Analyse Non-destructive Européen des Matériaux Anciens, L’Orme des Merisiers Saint-Aubin BP 48 91192 Gif-sur-Yvette CEDEX, FR
FIXLAB PLATFORM A Available facility: IPANEMA platform for ancient material research at Synchrotron SOLEIL
SOLEIL, the latest synchrotron radiation source
worldwide, is a third generation synchrotron source. This
generation of synchrotrons is characterised by their focus on
straight sections equipped with undulators and wigglers that
provide orders of magnitude higher brilliance than conventional
bending magnets and laboratory sources, and are very well suited to
imaging and spot experiments.
Research on ancient materials has been identified as one of the
priority areas at SOLEIL and all SOLEIL beamlines will be open
within FIXLAB for access to users. SOLEIL is currently entering the
construction phase of IPANEMA (‘European Institute for the
non-destructive photon-based analysis of ancient materials’) a
research platform entirely devoted to the study of cultural
heritage samples and objects. In order to support the research
carried out on ancient materials, IPANEMA will facilitate the
access of users to synchrotron beamlines at SOLEIL and at other
European synchrotrons, by facilitating contacts with beamline
teams, co-preparing research proposals, providing technical support
(adapted sample environment, support to sample preparation,
complementary analyses, data processing). The IPANEMA team is also
developing PUMA, a hard X-ray imaging beamline optimised for
ancient materials. The IPANEMA building (opening 2012) will comply
with museum standards for the conservation of ancient and
historical artefacts. It will also inform and train users, as well
as participate to dissemination activities, as New Lights on
Ancient Materials, the first ever European training programme on
synchrotron for heritage materials (2004, 2007 and 2010, COST).
This new platform is so far unique at the international level and
will open up gradually until 2012. IPANEMA will therefore
contribute to bridging the gap between synchrotron techniques and
the cultural heritage community, interconnecting specialists and
fostering technological transfer from the large-scale facility to
the conservation laboratories.
Among many other accessible modalities, synchrotron 2D
imaging (i.e. using a beam footprint of a few micrometers or
less, or using full field approaches) is either used for single
spot analyses on minute samples or to acquire 2D (3D)
spectromicroscopy images. Such images can lead to the very precise
mapping of composition (X-ray fluorescence),
chemical (X-ray absorption, infrared microscopy) and
textural / structural (X-ray diffraction)
information at the micrometer length-scale level, crucial
for the understanding of the materials, their ageing and the
treatments applied to them. Reducing the pixel size can
additionally decrease the complexity due to the lower number of
chemical species contributing to each spectrum collected, thus
simplifying further data processing. Synchrotron 3D
imaging, either in confocal mode (XRF, XAS…) or full-field
mode (micro-computed tomography) is undergoing a rapid development
that enables the imaging of samples or objects at sub-micron
resolution.
Five main methods are available at SOLEIL beamlines
for research on cultural heritage materials:
X-ray absorption, useful to
determine the atomic environments of a given element,
through two main approaches: X-ray absorption near edge
spectroscopy (XANES) and extended X-ray absorption fine structure
(EXAFS). The main use in archaeometry, art history and conservation
science is to obtain the precise determination of the chemical
environment of selected atoms, often to confirm an oxidation state
or to identify a chemical compound by comparison to references.
Accurate distances to neighbouring atoms can be determined. This
technique is specific to synchrotron as it requires a highly
monochromatic beam. The corresponding beamlines at SOLEIL are
DIFFABS, LUCIA, SAMBA, NANOSCOPIUM (from 2013) and GALAXIES (from
2010).
X-ray diffraction, useful to identify the
crystalline constituents of a sample (powder, thin section or large
sample) or to determine the precise structure at the atomic level
of a pure crystalline compound. Synchrotron provides unprecedented
flux and angular resolution as well as coupling with absorption
techniques. Further analysis can provide information on crystalline
domain size, texture (preferential orientation), structural
defects, etc. and can reveal mechanical or heat treatment (firing,
hammering…) The corresponding beamlines at SOLEIL are DIFFABS,
CRISTAL and NANOSCOPIUM (2013).
Infrared spectromicroscopy provides a
detailed identification of the chemical groups at the beam
footprint, therefore enabling the identification of chemical
signatures of organic and inorganic compounds at a few micrometer
resolution. Samples can be characterised in transmission mode, in a
reflection geometry using for instance attenuated total reflectance
crystals or in gas phase. At synchrotron beamlines fast imaging can
be performed at the resolution imposed by the diffraction limit
(3-6 µm) with very high signal-to-noise ratio. Infrared methods are
available at SMIS (mid-infrared domain) and AILES (far infrared
domain).
Small angle X-ray scattering is primarily
useful to determine the ‘supramolecular’ organisation of fibres
(proteins, cellulose) in ancient textile, paper, parchment, and
human remains or to determine the distribution of holes in a
sample. SAXS is further used for fibre identification in difficult
cases, to assess the preservation stage of textiles for
conservation purposes or to gain a better understanding of
alteration mechanism. The corresponding beamline at SOLEIL is
SWING.
Full field X-ray micro-computed
tomography methods rely on the interaction between a
wide beam and a sample. Some of the major specificities of the
synchrotron radiation (high flux, monochromaticity, near parallel
geometry and partial coherence) are particularly suited to the
observation of samples that are difficult to image using
conventional radiography and microtomography equipment. The
corresponding beamline at SOLEIL is PSICHÉ (2012).
Many other techniques are available in the X-ray and UV ranges.
Provider’ general information:
Website address:
www.synchrotron-soleil.fr/ipanemaWELCOME DESK Contact Person:
Name: Dr Loïc Bertrand
E-mail [email protected]
