High-resolution thermal imaging with a combination of nano-focus X-ray diffraction and ultra-fast chip calorimetry

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Abstract

A microelectromechanical-systems-based calorimeter designed for use on a synchrotron nano-focused X-ray beamline is described. This instrument allows quantitative DC and AC calorimetric measurements over a broad range of heating/cooling rates (≤100000 K s-1) and temperature modulation frequencies (≤1 kHz). The calorimeter was used for high-resolution thermal imaging of nanogram-sized samples subjected to X-ray-induced heating. For a 46 ng indium particle, the measured temperature rise reaches ∼0.2 K, and is directly correlated to the X-ray absorption. Thermal imaging can be useful for studies of heterogeneous materials exhibiting physical and/or chemical transformations. Moreover, the technique can be extended to three-dimensional thermal nanotomography.© 2014 International Union of Crystallography.

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Rosenthal, M., Doblas, D., Hernandez, J. J., Odarchenko, Y. I., Burghammer, M., Di Cola, E., … Ivanov, D. A. (2014). High-resolution thermal imaging with a combination of nano-focus X-ray diffraction and ultra-fast chip calorimetry. Journal of Synchrotron Radiation, 21(1), 223–228. https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600577513024892

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