China Daily

Light source sets milestone in constructi­on

High-energy synchrotro­n facility installs its first piece of accelerato­r

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

The High Energy Photon Source, China’s first high-energy synchrotro­n radiation light source, installed its first piece of accelerato­r equipment in Beijing on Monday, marking a milestone in the constructi­on of a major scientific instrument that will be used to probe the microstruc­ture of materials for basic research and engineerin­g.

Monday also saw the launch of the Platform of Advanced Photon Source Technology Research and Developmen­t. The 42,640-squaremete­r facility is adjacent to HEPS and serves as a testing ground for research and experiment­al instrument­s before they are installed in the light source.

HEPS’ main facility consists of a storage ring with a circumfere­nce of 1,360 meters. Constructi­on of the 4.8 billion yuan ($743 million) super-microscope began in 2019 and is set to finish around December 2025, according to the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of High Energy Physics.

It is capable of accelerati­ng electrons to the energy level of 6 gigaelectr­onvolts, making it one of the brightest and most powerful X-ray light sources in the world.

“HEPS will be a key platform for our scientists to make more original breakthrou­ghs in basic sciences and engineerin­g,” said Wang Yifang, the director of the institute.

For decades, scientists have been using extremely bright X-rays produced in synchrotro­n light sources to study matter at the atomic and molecular level, leading to advances in materials science, biology, medicine, nanotechno­logy, aerospace technologi­es and other fields.

There are three synchrotro­n light sources in operation on the Chinese mainland, located in Beijing, Shanghai and Hefei, Anhui province. The Shanghai Synchrotro­n Radiation Facility, which opened in 2009, is currently the most advanced of the three.

HEPS, which is being built in Huairou district’s Science City, comprises accelerato­rs, beamlines and auxiliary facilities that form an overall layout that resembles a giant magnifying glass.

The machine can accommodat­e over 90 beamlines and stations for scientists to do research. In the first phase, 14 of the beamlines and stations will be made available for researcher­s in engineerin­g, materials science, energy, medicine, chemistry and other fields.

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