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Publications

Glass-to-cryogenic-liquid transitions in aqueous solutions suggested by crack healing

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
C.U. Kim
M.W. Tate
Sol Gruner
Abstract

Observation of theorized glass-to-liquid transitions between lowdensity amorphous (LDA) and high-density amorphous (HDA) water states had been stymied by rapid crystallization below the homogeneous water nucleation temperature (∼235 K at 0.1 MPa). We report optical and X-ray observations suggestive of glass-toliquid transitions in these states. Crack healing, indicative of liquid, occurs when LDA ice transforms to cubic ice at 160 K, and when HDA ice transforms to the LDA state at temperatures as low as 120 K.

Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Sol M. Gruner Group

Biostructural Science Inspired by Next-Generation X-Ray Sources

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
Sol Gruner
E.E. Lattman
Abstract

Next-generation synchrotron radiation sources, such as X-ray free-electron lasers, energy recovery linacs, and ultra-low-emittance storage rings, are catalyzing novel methods of biomolecular microcrystallography and solution scattering. These methods are described and future trends are predicted. Importantly, there is a growing realization that serial microcrystallography and certain cutting-edge solution scattering experiments can be performed at existing storage ring sources by utilizing new technology.

Journal
Annual Review of Biophysics
Date Published
Funding Source
DBI-1231306
DE-FG02-10ER46693
P41GM103485
Group (Lab)
Sol M. Gruner Group

Ordered mesoporous titania from highly amphiphilic block copolymers: Tuned solution conditions enable highly ordered morphologies and ultra-large mesopores

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
M. Stefik
J. Song
H. Sai
S. Guldin
P. Boldrighini
M.C. Orilall
U. Steiner
Sol Gruner
U. Wiesner
Abstract

Crystalline transition metal oxides with controlled mesopore architectures are in increasing demand to enhance the performance of energy conversion and storage devices. Solution based block copolymer self-assembly routes to achieve ordered mesoporous and crystalline titania have been studied for more than a decade, but have so far mostly been limited to water and alcohol dispersible polymers. This constraint has limited the accessible morphology space as well as structural dimensions.

Journal
Journal of Materials Chemistry A
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-13322086
1120296
1332208
1409105
Group (Lab)
Sol M. Gruner Group

A high frame rate hybrid X-ray image sensor

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
A. Ercan
M.W. Tate
Sol Gruner
Abstract

This paper describes a solid-state image sensor for high-speed X-ray imaging. The sensor is made up of a light sensitive detector layer bump-bonded to a readout integrated circuit (ROIC). The detector layer is high resistivity n-type silicon and is fully depleted in operation. The p-implanted islands are used to define pixel regions with 100-μm × 100-μm area. The detector layer contains 852 × 209 pixels indium bump-bonded to four identical CMOS ROICs. Each ROIC contains 213 × 209 pixels and is fabricated using a 0.25-μm CMOS process.

Journal
IEEE Sensors Journal
Date Published
Funding Source
DE-FG-02978R62443
DE-FG-0297ER14805
DEFG02-10ER46693
Group (Lab)
Sol M. Gruner Group

Determination of crystallographic intensities from sparse data

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
K. Ayyer
H.T. Philipp
M.W. Tate
J.L. Wierman
V. Elser
Sol Gruner
Abstract

X-ray serial microcrystallography involves the collection and merging of frames of diffraction data from randomly oriented protein microcrystals. The number of diffracted X-rays in each frame is limited by radiation damage, and this number decreases with crystal size. The data in the frame are said to be sparse if too few X-rays are collected to determine the orientation of the microcrystal. It is commonly assumed that sparse crystal diffraction frames cannot be merged, thereby setting a lower limit to the size of microcrystals that may be merged with a given source fluence.

Journal
IUCrJ
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Sol M. Gruner Group
Veit Elser Group

Ordered mesoporous crystalline aluminas from self-assembly of ABC triblock terpolymer-butanol-alumina sols

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
K.W. Tan
H. Sai
S.W. Robbins
J.G. Werner
T.N. Hoheisel
S.A. Hesse
P.A. Beaucage
F.J. DiSalvo
Sol Gruner
M. Murtagh
U. Wiesner
Abstract

A one-pot synthesis approach is described to generate ordered mesoporous crystalline γ-alumina-carbon composites and ordered mesoporous crystalline γ-alumina materials via the combination of soft and hardlating chemistries using block copolymers as soft structure-directing agents. Periodically ordered alumina hybrid mesostructures were generated by self-assembly of a poly(isoprene)-block-poly(styrene)-block-poly(ethylene oxide) terpolymer, n-butanol and aluminum tri-sec-butoxide derived sols in organic solvents.

Journal
RSC Advances
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Sol M. Gruner Group

Cryogenic x-ray diffraction microscopy utilizing high-pressure cryopreservation

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
E. Lima
Y. Chushkin
P. Van Der Linden
C.U. Kim
F. Zontone
P. Carpentier
Sol Gruner
P. Pernot
Abstract

We present cryo x-ray diffraction microscopy of high-pressure-cryofixed bacteria and report high-convergence imaging with multiple image reconstructions. Hydrated D. radiodurans cells were cryofixed at 200 MPa pressure into ∼10-μm-thick water layers and their unstained, hydrated cellular environments were imaged by phasing diffraction patterns, reaching sub-30-nm resolutions with hard x-rays. Comparisons were made with conventional ambient-pressure-cryofixed samples, with respect to both coherent small-angle x-ray scattering and the image reconstruction.

Journal
Physical Review E - Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Sol M. Gruner Group

High-dynamic-range coherent diffractive imaging: Ptychography using the mixed-mode pixel array detector

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
K. Giewekemeyer
H.T. Philipp
R.N. Wilke
A. Aquila
M. Osterhoff
M.W. Tate
K.S. Shanks
A.V. Zozulya
T. Salditt
Sol Gruner
A.P. Mancuso
Abstract

Coherent (X-ray) diffractive imaging (CDI) is an increasingly popular form of X-ray microscopy, mainly due to its potential to produce high-resolution images and the lack of an objective lens between the sample and its corresponding imaging detector. One challenge, however, is that very high dynamic range diffraction data must be collected to produce both quantitative and high-resolution images.

Journal
Journal of Synchrotron Radiation
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Sol M. Gruner Group