Multimodal Synchrotron Approach: Research Needs and Scientific Vision

Citation

Chen-Wiegart, Y.-C.K.; Waluyo, I.; Kiss, A.; Campbell, S.; Yang, L.; Dooryhee, E.; Trelewicz, J.R.; Li, Y.; Gates, B.; Rivers, M.; Yager, K.G. "Multimodal Synchrotron Approach: Research Needs and Scientific Vision" Synchrotron Radiation News 2020, 33 44–47.
doi: 10.1080/08940886.2020.1701380

Summary

This report summarizes the outcome of a workshop, “Multimodal Synchrotron Approach—Research Needs and Scientific Vision,” held during the National Synchrotron Light Source–II (NSLS-II)/Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN) 2019 Users’ Meeting at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) on May 22, 2019.

Abstract

This report summarizes the outcome of a workshop, “Multimodal Synchrotron Approach—Research Needs and Scientific Vision,” held during the National Synchrotron Light Source–II (NSLS-II)/Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN) 2019 Users’ Meeting at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) on May 22, 2019. Multimodal approaches are defined by the convergence of multiple measurement probes to tackle a single scientific problem. In a synchrotron light source context, this may manifest as the usage of multiple synchrotron beamlines or multiple detection techniques on the same beamline to probe a single sample or system. The synchrotron multimodal approach may be achieved by incorporating ancillary probes into synchrotron beamlines, by exploiting other measurement modalities—such as the electron-based and optical imaging methods—to augment synchrotron datasets, or even by exploiting theory and modeling to complement measurements.