Sample Delivery Methods For In-Situ Studies and Serial Crystallography
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This is a public event. Participation is free of charge and registration is not required.
The workshop is followed by a small reception with drinks and snacks.
X-ray Free Electron Lasers (XFEL) can generate extremely bright and ultrafast X-ray pulses to determine structural properties of complex biomolecules at an atomic scale, and, create âmolecular moviesâ capturing rapid chemical processes with unprecedented temporal resolution. The high intensity of the X-rays destroys the studied samples immediately after detailed information is extracted. Consequently, fresh samples need to be delivered continuously, in sync with incoming X-ray pulses. This constitutes a key challenge for XFEL data collection.
This workshop brings together chemists, structural biologists, beamline scientists, and engineers to explore the latest advancements in sample delivery techniques for X-ray sources, with a specific focus on in-situ monitoring of bio-chemical reactions and serial crystallography.
Program
| 14:00 |
Opening and welcome remarks |
| 14:05 |
Droplet-Based Microfluidics for High-Throughput Chemistry |
| 14:35 |
Science in Arts and the Art of Science: Injecting Carpets and Microdroplets in X-Ray Microscopes |
| 14:55 |
Sample Delivery Methods for Protein Crystallography at SwissFEL Alvra |
| 15:15 |
Coffee break |
| 15:25 |
High Repetition Rate (And Other) Sample Delivery for European XFEL |
| 15:55 |
Imaging Isolated Nanoparticles and Their Ultrafast Dynamics |
| 16:15 |
The XFEL Hub at Diamond: Dynamic Structural Biology on Earth |
| 16:45 |
Developing Fixed-Target Instrumentation for Time-Resolved Crystallography at the Swissfel Cristallina Experimental Station |
| 17:05 |
Closing remarks, followed by a small reception with drinks |
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