Forschung zu Covid-19

Am PSI widmen sich mehrere Projekte wichtigen Forschungsfragen rund um das Coronavirus Sars-CoV-2 und den daraus resultierenden Erkrankungen. Wir informieren über Aktivitäten und Vorhaben, zum Beispiel zu Untersuchungen von Lungengewebe, zur Produktion von Proteinen und Antikörpern oder über Ideen für neue Forschung zu Covid-19.

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A crystal-clear picture

Fast and accurate data collection for macromolecular crystallography using the JUNGFRAU detector.

Nationaler Zukunftstag 2018

Am Zukunftstag 2018 durften wir 42 Mädchen und 68 Jungs der 5. bis 7. Klasse, im PSI begrüssen. Während einem halbtägigen Programm wurden 12 betreute Stationen von unseren motivierten Fachleuten angeboten. Danke an alle engagierten Helferinnen und Helfer!

Linking Structure to Dynamics in Protic Ionic Liquids: A Neutron Scattering Study of Correlated and Single-Particle Motions

Coupling between dynamical heterogeneity of ionic liquids and their structural periodicity on different length-scales can be directly probed by quasielastic neutron scattering with polarization analysis. The technique provides the tools to investigate single-particle and cooperative ion motions separately and, thus, dynamics of ion associations affecting the net charge transport can be experimentally explored.

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Hector Dejea receives an Outstanding Poster Presentation Award at the bMASR Conference

Hector Dejea, a PhD at TOMCAT, received an Outstanding Poster Presentation Award at the 9th bioMedical Applications of Synchrotron Radiation (bMASR2018) conference held in Beijing (China) from October 23rd till 27th 2018. He presented the latest results of his work, entitled Multiscale X-ray Phase Contrast Imaging for Assessing Cardiac Remodelling: towards in-vitro applications.

Dissociation thresholds and internal energy distributions can be measured by iPEPICO. The latter allow us to determine temperatures in dilute samples of reactive intermediates and radicals.

Radical Thermometers and Energetics

Methylperoxy radicals are crucial oxidation intermediates and could be synthesized photolytically in an exothermic reaction. Despite their vanishingly small concentration, their temperature could be measured after a few ten thousand collisions inside the reactor, which opens up the possibility of time-resolved operando temperature measurements. Also the reaction energy to yield methyl cations and oxygen could be determined with sub-kJ mol–1 precision, which firmly anchors the methylperoxy energetics to that of well-known stable species and opens up the possibility of highly accurate radical thermochemistry measurements.

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Taming Reactive Molecular Magnets

Studying organic molecular magnets is a challenge, because the high-spin diradical character of these compounds dramatically increases the reactivity and reduces the lifetime. Researchers from PSI, ETH Zurich, Wollongong and Melbourne, Australia succeeded in taming the meta-xylylene diradical and were able to study its electronic and thermochemical properties.

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Congratulations to Dimitri Osmont

Dimitri successfully defended his PhD at the University of Bern, entitled "Reconstruction of forest fires through chemical analysis of black carbon in ice cores from high- alpine glaciers". This thesis formed part the collaborative project paleo fires with ETH Zürich and University of Bern funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation.

Neutron scattering pattern of the material CsNiCrF6 showing magnetic correlations. Left: experiment; right: theory.(Image reproduced from [1].)

Charges enter the ice age

Scattering experiments establish the partly disordered material CsNiCrF6 as the first verified example of a charge ice — and show that it supports Coulomb phases with correlations in three different degrees of freedom.

Relationship between crystal structure and multiferroic orders in orthorhombic perovskite manganites

We use resonant and nonresonant x-ray diffraction measurements in combination with first-principles electronic structure calculations and Monte Carlo simulations to study the relationship between crystal structure and multiferroic orders in the orthorhombic perovskite manganites, o−RMnO3 (R is a rare-earth cation or Y).

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Design of magnetic spirals in layered perovskites: Extending the stability range far beyond room temperature

In insulating materials with ordered magnetic spiral phases, ferroelectricity can emerge owing to the breaking of in- version symmetry. This property is of both fundamental and practical interest, particularly with a view to exploiting it in low-power electronic devices. Advances toward technological applications have been hindered, however, by the rel- atively low ordering temperatures Tspiral of most magnetic spiral phases, which rarely exceed 100 K.

Dynamic volume magnetic domain wall imaging in grain oriented electrical steel at power frequencies with accumulative high-frame rate neutron dark-field imaging

The mobility of magnetic domains forms the link between the basic physical properties of a magnetic material and its global characteristics such as permeability and saturation field. Most commonly, surface domain structure are studied using magneto-optical Kerr microscopy. The limited information depth of approx. 20 nanometers, however, allows only for an indirect interpretation of the internal volume domain structures.

Rolling dopant and strain in Y-doped BiFeO3 epitaxial thin films for photoelectrochemical water splitting

We report significant photoelectrochemical activity of Y-doped BiFeO3 (Y-BFO) epitaxial thin films deposited on Nb:SrTiO3 substrates. The Y-BFO photoanodes exhibit a strong dependence of the photocurrent values on the thickness of the films, and implicitly on the induced epitaxial strain.

Dynamics of the Coordination Complexes in a Solid-State Mg Electrolyte

Coordination complexes of magnesium borohydride show promising properties as solid electrolytes for magnesium ion batteries and warrant a thorough microscopic description of factors governing their mobility properties. Here, the dynamics of Mg(BH4)2-diglyme0.5 on the atomic level are investigated by means of quasielastic neutron scattering supported by density functional theory calculations and IR and NMR spectroscopy.

Multiple Coulomb phase in the fluoride pyrochlore CsNiCrF6

The Coulomb phase is an idealized state of matter whose properties are determined by factors beyond conventional consid- erations of symmetry, including global topology, conservation laws and emergent order. Theoretically, Coulomb phases occur in ice-type systems such as water ice and spin ice; in dimer models; and in certain spin liquids. However, apart from ice-type systems, more general experimental examples are very scarce.

Electronic structure of overdoped La1.77Sr0.23CuO4. (left) dx2-y2 and dz2 band structure 
along the nodal direction. (middle) Light polarization analysis of the dx2-y2 and dz2 bands.
(right) Anti-nodal Fermi surface warping along the kz direction.

Cuprate Trilogy

In a trio of recent papers, a research group from the University of Zürich has made a number of new discoveries about the nature of cuprates' electronic structure and orbital composition. The results have important implications for superconductivity and pseudogaps in cuprates, and even the existence of type-II Dirac fermions in oxides.

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Tagesschau: Neue Beweise zu Gletscher-Schmelze

The evening news on Swiss national television, SRF Tagesschau on Saturday evening 19h30, featured LUC's research on regional climate change with a story on the cause of glacier melting at the end of the Little Ice Age in Switzerland.

SwissFEL's First Call for Proposals

The first SwissFEL call for proposals took place, deadline for submission was the 15th of September. In this first call for proposals SwissFEL received overwhelming interest from the user community. A total of 47 proposals were submitted for the SwissFEL Alvra experimental station and 26 for the Bernina experimental station. The Proposal Review committee PRC took place on 18-19 October 2018.

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Successful PhD Defense

Jacinta Edebeli successfully defended her PhD with the title "Multiphase Chemical Reactivity in Cold Regions" at the ETHZ. Congratulations! The thesis was part of the MiSo project in co-operation with LUC's Analytical Chemistry research group and the WSL-SLF Davos. The project was jointly funded by Swiss National Science Foundation.

(a) Scanning transmission x-ray microscopy images of magnetic skyrmions stabilized in a nanostructured Pt/Co/Ir disc; (b) Skyrmion-dependent contribution to the Hall resistivity

Discrete Hall contribution of magnetic skyrmions

The reliable electrical detection of magnetic skyrmions is of fundamental importance for the application of such topological magnetic quasi-particles for data storage devices. Researchers in a joint collaboration between the University of Leeds and the PolLux endstation have investigated the electrical detection of isolated magnetic skyrmions in applications-relevant nanostructured devices, observing the presence of a strong skyrmion-dependent contribution to the Hall resistivity.

Observation of the out-of-plane magnetization in a mesoscopic ferromagnetic structure superjacent to a superconductor

The geometry of magnetic flux penetration in a high temperature superconductor at a buried interface was imaged using element-specific x-ray excited luminescence. We performed low tem- perature observation of the flux penetration in YBa2Cu3O7–δ (YBCO) at a buried interface by imaging of the perpendicular magnetization component in square Permalloy (Py) mesostructures patterned superjacent to a YBCO film.

Demonstration of femtosecond X-ray pump X-ray probe diffraction on protein crystals

Our experiments, published in the September issue of Structural Dynamics, demonstrate the feasibility of time-resolved pump-multiprobe X-ray diffraction experiments on protein crystals using a split-and-delay setup which was temporarily installed at the LCLS X-ray Free Electron Laser.

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Welcome Martina Barandun

We warmly welcome Martina Barandun as Postdoc in the Laboratory of Environmental Chemistry. She joined the Analytical Chemistry group on 1 October 2018.



Martina Barandun studied Geography at the University of Fribourg, where she also obtained her PhD in the Department of Geosciences. For the latter she worked on transient snowline observations to remotely derive seasonal to sub-seasonal glacier mass balance in the Tien Shan and Pamir mountains of Central Asia. At PSI, Martina Barandun will quantify the concentration of different light absorbing impurities such as black carbon or mineral dust particles in surface snow and ice from various glaciers in Central Chile, to estimate their impact on albedo reduction and accelerated melt. This is a joint project with the Centro de Estudios Cientificos in Valdivia, Chile.

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Cristina Müller (CRS) receives the Marie Curie Award

The Marie Curie Award, the most prestigious price by the European Association of Nuclear Medicine, has been awarded in 2018 for the project "Terbium-161 for PSMA-Targeted Radionuclide Therapy of Prostate Cancer", lead by Christina Müller in collaboration with Nick van der Meulen (LRC/NES) EANM-Website(link is external).

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Congratulations to Pablo Corral Arroyo

Pablo successfully defended his PhD at the University of Bern, entitled "Impact of indirect photochemistry of Brown Carbon and iron carboxylate complexes on gas and aerosol chemistry". This thesis formed part of collaborative project with ETH Zürich on the feedbacks between microphysics and photochemistry in organic aerosols funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation.