ACA 2012 - Boston Evolution of Small Molecule Instrumentation in North America Susan K. Byram, Charles F. Campana, Daniel F. Frankel

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Computer Controlled Car By Daniel K L TUNG Supervised by Dr. L Allison (CS) Second Reader Dr. R Lisner (ENG)
Advertisements

The MISSYM Family: Software for the detection of Missed or Pseudo Symmetry A.L.Spek Utrecht University The Netherlands.
Area Detectors Like film can detect position Like scintillation detector can measure intensity With modern computers can assign hkl from unaligned crystal.
Laue Photography Mathematics Structures time-resolved crystallography neutron crystallography electron crystallography.
Lesson 15 Continue looking at data collection methods Look at film, serial diffractometers and area detectors.
Lesson 15 Continue looking at data collection methods Look at film, serial diffractometers and area detectors.
Determination of Protein Structure. Methods for Determining Structures X-ray crystallography – uses an X-ray diffraction pattern and electron density.
Chemical Bonding Covalent Bonds vs Ionic Bonds.
Measurement of Light: Applications ISAT 300 Foundations of Instrumentation and Measurement D. J. Lawrence Spring 1999.
Small Molecule Example – YLID Unit Cell Contents and Z Value
MODULE 4 - Introduction to EBSD
Timothy G. Fawcett, Soorya N. Kabbekodu, Fangling Needham and Cyrus E. Crowder International Centre for Diffraction Data, Newtown Square, PA, USA Experimental.
Computing Protein Structures from Electron Density Maps: The Missing Loop Problem I. Lotan, H. van den Bedem, A. Beacon and J.C. Latombe.
BMME 560 & BME 590I Medical Imaging: X-ray, CT, and Nuclear Methods Introductory Topics Part 1.
Modeling Digital Remote Sensing Presented by Rob Snyder.
Lecture 5.1 Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM)
? ? Why do molecules assemble the way they do? Polymorphism Different polymorphs  different properties Pharmaceuticals Hydrogen bonding Framework forming.
Quantitative Chemical Analysis Seventh Edition Quantitative Chemical Analysis Seventh Edition Chapter Atomic spectroscopy Applications Copyright.
(X-Ray Crystallography) X-RAY DIFFRACTION. I. X-Ray Diffraction  Uses X-Rays to identify the arrangement of atoms, molecules, or ions within a crystalline.
Hanging Drop Sitting Drop Microdialysis Crystallization Screening.
Charles Campana Bruker AXS Inc.
Main detector types Multi Pixel Photon Counter (MPPC) and Charge Coupled Devices (CCDs) How does it work? 1. Photon hits a pixel producing electron hole.
Digital Cameras (Basics) CCD (charge coupled device): image sensor Resolution: amount of detail the camera can capture Capturing Color: filters go on.
Instrumentation - making & detecting x-rays Read Roe - Chap 2 through (ignore neutrons)
Detectors point count detectors linear position-sensitive detectors area detectors energy dispersive detectors point count detectors linear position-sensitive.
Digital Photography Fundamentals Rule One - all digital cameras capture information at 72 dots per inch (DPI) regardless of their total pixel count and.
Neutron Generation and Detection Lee Robertson Instrument & Source Division Oak Ridge National Laboratory 17 th National School on Neutron and X-ray Scattering.
Detecting Electrons: CCD vs Film Practical CryoEM Course July 26, 2005 Christopher Booth.
Lesson 16 Preliminary Steps to Data Collection While there are many types of equipment out there our discussions will be directed at area detectors and.
Digital Face Replacement in Photographs CSC2530F Project Presentation By: Shahzad Malik January 28, 2003.
Lesson 16 CCD Detectors Visit the Lab. Charged Coupled Device The ccd is essentially a digital camera To keep noise down it is cooled It is almost realtime.
1. Diffraction intensity 2. Patterson map Lecture
Crystallography and Diffraction
Peter J. LaPuma1 © 1998 BRUKER AXS, Inc. All Rights Reserved This is powder diffraction!
X RAY CRYSTALLOGRAPHY. WHY X-RAY? IN ORDER TO BE OBSERVED THE DIMENTIONS OF AN OBJECT MUST BE HALF OF THE LIGHT WAVELENGHT USED TO OBSERVE IT.
Seeing the Subatomic Stephen Miller Saturday Morning Physics October 11, 2003.
1 Data Acquisition What choices need to be made?.
March 2004 Charles A. DiMarzio, Northeastern University ECEG287 Optical Detection Course Notes Part 15: Introduction to Array Detectors Profs.
Module 4 Projection System CHARMEIN JAKOSALEM.  Filmstrip Projector Filmstrip Projector  Slide Projector Slide Projector  Overhead Projector Overhead.
Methods in Chemistry III – Part 1 Modul M.Che.1101 WS 2010/11 – 8 Modern Methods of Inorganic Chemistry Mi 10:15-12:00, Hörsaal II George Sheldrick
“Performance of BTVs during the CNGS commissioning” E. Bravin AB/BI NBI th International workshop on Neutrino Beams and Instrumentation 4-9 September.
X-ray diffraction and minerals. Is this mineral crystalline?
Understanding mass transport in fuel cells using neutron imaging
Charge-Coupled Devices Astrophysics Lesson 5. Learning Objectives Describe and explain the structure and operation of the charge coupled device State.
Before Beginning – Must copy over the p4p file – Enter../xl.p4p. – Enter../xl.hkl. – Do ls to see the files are there – Since the.p4p file has been created.
Motion Estimation from Camera Meng Zhou
Methods in Chemistry III – Part 1 Modul M.Che.1101 WS 2010/11 – 9 Modern Methods of Inorganic Chemistry Mi 10:15-12:00, Hörsaal II George Sheldrick
Fourier transform from r to k: Ã(k) =  A(r) e  i k r d 3 r Inverse FT from k to r: A(k) = (2  )  3  Ã(k) e +i k r d 3 k X-rays scatter off the charge.
SARDAR PATEL INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY E.NO : Guide By:- V.N.Thakkar.
Digital Cameras in the Classroom Day One Basics Ann Howden UEN Professional Development
Charles Supper Award Talk 2-Dimensional X-ray detectors – What do we really want and how can we build it ? Ron Hamlin August 1, 2012.
Laue Photography Mathematics Structures time-resolved crystallography
Software for Crystallographic and Rietveld Analysis
Organic Chemistry Lesson 21 X-ray crystallography.
What’s a modulated structure ?
A double-protractor system UCLA late 1987
Automated Spotsize Measurements
Cryo-em Electron microscopy (EM) has become an extremely popular method for the ultrastructural study of macromolecules, cells and tissues. With our in-house.
TEM and SEM.
Cryo-em services Electron microscopy (EM) has become an extremely popular method for the ultrastructural study of macromolecules, cells and tissues. With.
Cryo-EM Services Cryo-EM Services in Creative Biostructure.
A special case of calibration
Crystal structure determination
Instrumental Chemistry
Neutron Detectors for Materials Research
Y The graph of a rule connecting x and y is shown. From the graph, when x is -1, what is y? Give me a value of x that makes y positive, negative, equal.
Compounds vs. Molecules
Automated Spotsize Measurements
The PLATON/TwinRotMat Tool for Twinning Detection
Presentation transcript:

ACA Boston Evolution of Small Molecule Instrumentation in North America Susan K. Byram, Charles F. Campana, Daniel F. Frankel or

Reflections on Chemical Crystallography Evolution, Film Cameras Scintillation Counters Multi-wire Proportional Counters TV Detectors Image Plates CCD Detectors CMOS Detectors And their influence on Size of Structures Time per Structure Total Structures Published in CSD

Chemical Crystallography in the 1950’s Equipment –Film methods (Weissenberg & Precession cameras – assembly at Nonius started in 1948, shown here in 1970) –Manual estimation of intensities (spot judgers, densitometers) Computers –A few large mainframe computers (SWAC, IBM 704) Software Packages –FORTRAN programs for specific mainframe computers: Fourier maps, least-squares refinement

Chemical Crystallography in the 1950’s: very early computers A module from SWAC given to me by Bob Sparks SWAC is the Standards Western Automatic Computer built in 1950 for National Bureau of Standards and used from 1954 to 1967 at UCLA SWAC was used to solve the vitamin B12 structure in 1955

Chemical Crystallography in the 1950’s Size of Structures –Usually < 30 atoms total; mostly inorganic, minerals, organic with heavy atoms Time per Structure –Approximately one year Total Structures Published –<500 (1959 est.)

Chemical Crystallography in the 1960’s Equipment –Film methods (Weissenberg & precession cameras) –Scintillation counter diffractometers (GE, Picker, Hilger Watts etc) Computers –Large mainframe computers (CDC6600, IBM 360, UNIVAC 1107) Software Packages –FORTRAN programs for mainframe computers: ORFLS (Busing & Levy), ORFFE, ORTEP (Carroll Johnson, shown at ACA Knoxville 2008), XRAY67 (J. Stewart)

‘At least 9 ’ diffractometers were shown at IUCr Stonybrook 1969 Datex/ GE (1969)GE Crystal OrienterEulerian cradle Hilger & Watts (1963)Eulerian cradle JEOLEulerian cradle Nonius (1962)CAD-3Open Eulerian Nonius (1969)CAD-4 prototypeKappa North American Philips (1963)PAILREDWeissenberg Philips (1969)PW1100Eulerian cradle Picker (1965)FACS-IEulerian cradle RigakuAFC-2Eulerian cradle Siemens (1964)AED¼ Eulerian cradle Stoe (1968)STADI-4Eulerian cradle Syntex (1969)P1barEulerian cradle Per Tom Furnas in Crystallography in North America, Eulerian cradle name was from ‘Dave Harker who sensed that the proposed coordinate system was the ancient set of Euler’s angles’ (introduction dates) from Sparks talk June 1987 at Erich Woelfel’s birthday fest at Stoe

Hilger & Watts full circle diffractometer (1969) – Arndt & Willis part of design

Nonius CAD-3 ( Tech Univ Delft, early 70’s) CAD-4 (PDP-8 control 1976) Siem Poot design

Philips PW1100 diffractometer (1970) Evert Keulen design

Picker FACS-I diffractometer (PDP-5 control 1964); Tom Furnas design with ORNL control ( Picker was my ‘first diffractometer’ in the Nyburg group at University of Toronto) Bill Busing, ORNL, at IUCr Hamburg

Rigaku AFC-2 four-circle diffractometer with Facom computer (1969)

Siemens quarter-chi circle diffractometer (1965); designed by Hoppe at MPI, Munich & commercialized by Siemens

Stoe STADI-4 diffractometer (1970) Dir. Erich Woelfel (shown at IUCr Hamburg)

Syntex P1bar diffractometer (1969) Bob Sparks software design (shown upper R) Sten Samson mechanical design (shown at ACA LA 2001)

Chemical Crystallography in the 1960’s Size of Structures –Usually < 100 non-H atoms; more organic structures Time per Structure –Typically months Total Structures Published –8,300 (1969 est.)

Chemical Crystallography in the 1970’s Equipment –Computer-controlled diffractometers (Syntex P1bar, P2 1, P3/R3, Enraf Nonius CAD-4) –Low temperature devices gain in routine use (Syntex LT-1 on right, with H. Hope, UC Davis, shown here at IUCr Kyoto 1972) Computers –Departmental computers (IBM 7094, VAX 11/780) –Dedicated mini-computer systems (Nova 1200, Nova 4, Eclipse S/140, PDP 11) Software Packages –Public domain software large computers: XRAY76, MULTAN (Main & Woolfson), CRYSTALS (Carruthers, Rowlett), SHELX76 (Sheldrick) –Commercial software for dedicated minicomputers: Syntex XTL & EXTL, Nicolet SHELXTL, Enraf Nonius SDP

Chemical Crystallography in the 1970’s: the decade of software At Syntex, Bob Sparks tried to introduce something new every year at crystallographic meetings; milestones were: 1970 ACA Ottawa autoindexing (Bob Sparks) 1972 IUCr Kyoto P21 automated diffractometer, AD-1 autodensitometer and LT-1 low temperature device 1973 ACA Storrs XTL full structure solution, refinement & display on Data General minicomputer with custom floating point processor 1973 red/green TV display (Edgar Meyer, Texas A&M) 1979 first SHELXTL proprietary release (George Sheldrick, shown here on right)

Chemical Crystallography in the 1970’s: facilitating productivity The introduction of the P21 (below), LT-1 and XTL facilitated some immensely productive research groups, including the Yuri Struchkov group at INEOS in Moscow (shown at USA reunion). Staff crystallographers evolved; first was Curt Haltiwanger, University of Colorado (on R) P21 users list: Notable early users include Prof Bruce Foxman honored yesterday at ACA Boston (shown at ACA Knoxville 2008)

Chemical Crystallography in the 1970’s Size of Structures –Usually < 200 non-H atoms Time per Structure –Typically one month Total Structures Published –32,000 (1979)

Chemical Crystallography in the 1980’s Equipment –Computer-controlled diffractometers (Nicolet R3m/V, Siemens P4, Nonius CAD-4, Rigaku AFC-6 & AFC-5) –2-D detectors primarily for protein data used occasionally for chemistry (Nicolet X-100, Nonius FAST, ADSC multiwire, Rigaku image plate) Computers –Dedicated mini-computer systems (Eclipse S/140, MicroVAX II) –Personal Computers (DOS) (386, 486 & PENTIUM PC’s) Software Packages –Public domain software small computers: SHELX, NRCVAX (LePage, White, Eric Gabe above), CRYSTALS (David Watkin, below) –Commercial software for personal computers (Nicolet/Siemens SHELXTL, MSC Texsan)

Commercial Area Detectors in the 1980’s –ADSC multiwire introduced 1970’s but not used in chemical crystallography until 1980’s (N. Xuong, Ron Hamlin – Mark I model shown here on left 1975) –Nonius FAST 1982 (U. Arndt) (brochure below) –Nicolet/Xentronics X (Ron Burns, shown here on right at ACA McMaster 1986) –Rigaku image plate 1986

Chemical Crystallography in the 1980’s Size of Structures –Usually < 400 non-H atoms Time per Structure –Typically 1 -2 weeks Total Structures Published –95,000 (1989)

Chemical Crystallography in the 1990’s Equipment –Computer-controlled diffractometers (Siemens P4, Nonius CAD-4, Rigaku AFC-7) –Rotating anode sources with Cu x-ray mirrors (Siemens P4/RA here with multiwire, Rigaku AFC7R, Huber) –First multilayer Goebel mirrors –First commercial Mo CCD systems (Siemens SMART CCD) Computers –Dedicated mini-computer systems (SGI Personal Iris) –Personal Computers (Win NT, Win XP) Software Packages –Public domain software small computers SHELX, CRYSTALS, NRCVAX, PLATON (Ton Spek, shown here), SIR (Giacovazzo) –Commercial software for personal computers: Bruker SHELXTL, Nonius MaXus, MSC Texsan

1993: the SMART CCD system for chemical crystallography SMART CCD (shown right) revolutionized the chemical crystallography experiment in 1993 (R&D 100 award ceremony 1994 below: the only picture of Bob Sparks in a tuxedo!) SMART collected FASTER DATA on a Mo sealed tube than feasible on a Mo point detector rotating anode hours, not days, for structures electron density studies in days, not months SMART measured highly redundant data, thus giving BETTER DATA for difficult crystals very small samples very large unit cells eg A

Chemical Crystallography in the 1990’s Size of Structures –Usually < 600 non-H atoms Time per Structure –Typically one week Total Structures Published –229,000 (1999)

Chemical Crystallography Equipment –CCDs commonly used (Bruker SMART APEX I & II, Nonius KappaCCD & KAPPA APEX II, KUMA/Oxford Diffraction) –Advanced LT devices (Oxford Cryosystems 700, Cobra, DTC; Bruker KRYO-FLEX, MSC X-STREAM, Cryo Industries) –Benchtop systems for chemists introduced (Rigaku SCX mini, Bruker SMART X2S) –Microfocus sealed tube source/optics for home labs (Incoatec/Bruker IS, Osmic/Rigaku, Xenocs, AXO Dresden) Computers –Personal Computers (Win2000, WinXP, LINUX) Software Packages –Public: SHELX, CRYSTALS, PLATON, SIR, JANA2000 for modulated structures (Petricek, Dusek, Palatinus), –GUI’s: WinGX (Farrugia), OLEX2 (Dolomanov, Puschmann, Bourhis, Gildea, Howard), ShelXle (Huebschle) –Commercial software for personal computers: Bruker SHELXTL, Rigaku/MSC Crystal Clear

CCD systems commonly used (Bruker SMART APEX I & II, Nonius KappaCCD & Bruker KAPPA APEX II, KUMA/Oxford Diffraction) Bruker design team + George Sheldrick; John Chambers rear 4 th from R SMART APEX KAPPA CCDKAPPA DUO

Chemical Crystallography Size of Structures –Usually < 1000 non-H atoms; many twinned structures solved Time per Structure –Typically a few hours to overnight Total Structures Published –528,000 (2009 est.)

Chemical Crystallography 2010 forward Equipment –CMOS systems introduced for home lab use (Dectris Pilatus, Bruker PHOTON 100 sensor shown here) –Increasing use of benchtop systems for teaching crystallography (Bruker SMART X2S, Rigaku XtaLAB mini) –Even brighter home lab sources (Excillum METAL JET shown here, Rigaku and Bruker rotating anode generators) –Increasing use of Microfocus Sealed Tube Sources for brightness and low maintenance (green solutions) –600,000 structures reached in 2012

Increasing Use of Microfocus Sealed Tube Sources Microfocus sealed tube sources coupled to multilayer optics (on right) deliver a much brighter, very stable beam, making it easier to measure small or weakly diffracting crystals on a low maintenance system Bruker/Incoatec dual source options, shown below, are facilitated by microfocus source/optics: Mo Sealed tube plus Cu IS Dual IS (Mo + Cu) or (Ag + Mo)

These Developments Have Brought Benefits to Chemists Better Quality Crystal Structures Rapid Structure Determination for Routine Problems Crystallographic Expertise, Validation and Report Generation Built into Programs Improved Capabilities to Analyze –Larger Structures –Smaller Crystals –Unstable Compounds –Twinned Specimens –Modulated Structures As George Sheldrick just said, it is a very interesting time to be around!

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS With much thanks in particular to my co-author Charles F. Campana (on right) for a framework and my colleague Frank van Meurs for the historical Nonius and other diffractometer slides to Catherine Klein & Lee Daniels at Rigaku to permission to use the AFC-2 & XtaLAB mini slides to Ron Hamlin at ADSC for the Mark-I multiwire photo to the newsletters of IUCr for Eric Gabe photo, ACA for Picker FACS-I to David Watkin for permission to use his photo to Peter Mueller of MIT, the ACA roving photographer to the CCDC for the # of structures & data base chart and to our Syntex/Nicolet/Siemens/Nonius/Bruker company archives

© Copyright Bruker Corporation. All rights reserved. Innovation with Integrity Copyright © 2011 Bruker Corporation. All rights reserved.