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    <record>
       <contributors>
          <authors>
             <author>Cianciosi, F.</author>
             <author>Buisson, A.-L.</author>
             <author>Tafforeau, P.</author>
             <author>Van Vaerenbergh, P.</author>
          </authors>
       </contributors>
       <titles>
          <title>
             BM18, the New ESRF-EBS Beamline for Hierarchical Phase-Contrast Tomography
          </title>
       </titles>
       <publisher>JACoW Publishing</publisher>
       <pub-location>Geneva, Switzerland</pub-location>
		 <isbn>2673-5520</isbn>
		 <isbn>978-3-95450-229-5</isbn>
		 <electronic-resource-num>10.18429/JACoW-MEDSI2020-MOIO02</electronic-resource-num>
		 <language>English</language>
		 <pages>1-5</pages>
       <keywords>
          <keyword>SRF</keyword>
          <keyword>detector</keyword>
          <keyword>experiment</keyword>
          <keyword>vacuum</keyword>
          <keyword>GUI</keyword>
       </keywords>
       <work-type>Contribution to a conference proceedings</work-type>
       <dates>
          <year>2021</year>
          <pub-dates>
             <date>2021-10</date>
          </pub-dates>
       </dates>
       <urls>
          <related-urls>
              <url>https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-MEDSI2020-MOIO02</url>
              <url>https://jacow.org/medsi2020/papers/moio02.pdf</url>
          </related-urls>
       </urls>
       <abstract>
          BM18 is an ESRF-EBS beamline for hierarchical tomography, it will combine sub-micron precision and the possibility to scan very large samples. The applications will include biomedical imaging, material sciences and cultural heritage. It will allow the complete scanning of a post-mortem human body at 25 µm, with the ability to zoom-in in any location to 0.7 µm. BM18 is exploiting the high-energy-coherence beam of the new EBS storage ring. The X-ray source is a short tripole wiggler that gives a 300mm-wide beam at the sample position placed 172m away from the source. Due to this beam size, nearly all of the instruments are devel-oped in-house. A new building was constructed to ac-commodate the largest synchrotron white-beam Experi-mental Hutch worldwide (42x5-6m). The main optical components are refractive lenses, slits, filters and a chop-per. There is no crystal monochromator present but the combination of the optical elements will provide high quality filtered white beams, as well as an inline mono-chromator system. The energy will span from 25 to 350 keV. The Experimental Hutch is connected by a 120m long UHV pipe with a large window at the end, followed by a last set of slits. The sample stage can position, rotate and monitor with sub-micron precision samples up to 2,5x0.6m (H x Diam.) and 300kg. The resulting machine is 4x3x5m and weighs 50 tons. The girder for detectors carries up to 9 detectors on individual 2-axis stages. It moves on air-pads on a precision marble floor up to 38m behind the sample stage to perform phase contrast imag-ing at a very high energy on large objects. The commissioning is scheduled for the beginning of 2022; the first ’friendly users’ are expected in March 2022 and the full operation will start in September 2022.
       </abstract>
    </record>
  </records>
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