Roger B
Well-Known Member
A 3 MeV electron will penetrate around 10mm of polyethylene, less in higher density materials.That's very cool. Working as a structural biologist I've sent samples to the Australian Synchrontron but never had a chance to visit in person.
And those are some monster electron beams you work with! I've done a lot of electron microscopy, but the instruments I've used were 200 or 300 kV. 3MV electrons would be something else... I guess you are going for deep penetration into the material when crosslinking? Just to nerd out a bit, what do you use for the electron source? Instruments I worked with used tungsten or LaB6 hot cathodes but the fancy cryo-EM microscopes at my uni use cold FEG sources, makes the beam more focused.
The electron source is a spiral of tungsten wire about 1 cm in diameter, there is a picture of one in the white paper. As the beam is 10s of kilowatts we don’t want it too tightly focused. If it goes astray things melt quite quickly.