Scientific and Technical Achievements:
- We established and founded LUXEM, the Laboratory for Ultrafast X-ray and Electron Microscopy. We recruited personnel to the project.
- We carried out the green-field design and implementation of the infrastructure in collaboration with the Department and the HI logistics management. We took care that all technical requirements of the infrastructure, relevant to the project, were faithfully implemented.
- We installed and validated the ultrafast laser and the High-Harmonic Generation (HHG) EUV/soft X-ray source. Fine tuning and optimization are continuously ongoing to adapt the technology to the scientific requirements and objectives of ULTRAIMAGE.
- We carried out an in-depth technology scouting of every single technological component of the experiment, accompanied by extensive simulations and collaboration with industrial partners to achieve custom elements and performances specifically tailored to the scientific objectives of ULTRAIMAGE. This included – among the many – vacuum supplies, EUV optics, HHG and laser technology.
- We purchased and assembled all customs part, we working on a robust automation of the entire apparatus and commissioning it
- We fostered collaboration with the FERMI free-electron laser, through expeditions (beamtimes) that led to pioneering demonstration: the possibility to use of ultrafast XUV ptychography to disentangle the response from chiral compounds and for plasmonic response in nanostructures.
- We established sample provision in a modular approach to their microscopy, with our strategic partners at ETHZ (CH).
- We established a local collaboration with key medical imaging stakeholders at the HI. This platform allows us to develop new (mid and longer-term) possibilities, e.g. real-time imaging of photo-blasting of cancer cells bound to ligated nanoparticles.
- In parallel, we developed a network of international collaboration to guarantee knowledge transfer and implement the action described in WP1. Specifically: 1) Collaboration with the Colorado School of Mines (USA) for the development of ptychographic image reconstruction algorithms; 2) Collaboration with IMDEA Nanociencia (Spain) to carry out the ray-tracing simulations relying on our source parameters. This allowed to: (i) select the optical layout of the microscope, (iii) select the piezo-actuated stages for full in-vacuum automation; (iii) select the detector technology and its actuation; 3) Collaboration with LACUS – EPFL (Switzerland), where a complementary HHG source is available. Technology exchange was fostered by sending our personnel for short-term training periods.
- We were able to consolidate at both National and International levels the impact and relevance of research implemented by ULTRAIMAGE, attracting the collaboration of strategic partners in EUV mirrors fabrication and metrology (Europe, Asia, USA), sample providers (Switzerland). Furthermore, this ERC grant enabled the P.I. to further consolidate her research group, LUXEM, participating in dedicated national funding initiatives to secure funding for projects spinning off the main ERC ULTRAIMAGE. Consequently, an additional Laboratory space in the Physics Department was allocated to LUXEM’s research, to further the implementation and expand the purpose of ULTRAIMAGE.
Dissemination & Communication Achievements:
- We established a cohesive communication platform composed of project and group identity, with associated website, and social networks (LinkedIn and Instagram). These platforms are periodically monitored and kept up-to-date to share the latest events from the project with different stakeholders (scientific community, young researchers, general public & policy makers). We contributed to the partner company's (Dectris) blog with a dedicated article and got ULTRAIMAGE research highlighted in a top national Italian Newspaper, Il Sole24Ore.
- We actively participated in a host of STEM education events with exhibitions and seminars, interviews and videos, i.e. the “European Researchers Night”, "Sumo-Science", “Stati Generali of Regione Lombardia”, “Incontri di Fisica Moderna”, “Fix the Leaky Pipeline: equality in science”, “International Day of Light 2024“, with the aim of consolidating the new ultrafast laser science platform promoted by ULTRAIMAGE via LUXEM in the context of the HI and at the Regional, National and International Levels. Participation to public events was successfully selected to target different stakeholders: scientific community, young researchers, civil society, and policy makers.
- We were invited/participated to Schools and International Conferences to promote our research, our results, and to foster networking with peers. This led to the foundation of a Consortium of Correlative Ultrafast Imaging Methods, which now bridges academic, research and industry partners across 3 continents. This consortium collaborates to achieve: i) characterization of heterogeneity, interfaces, disorder in nanostructured matter; ii) observation of its at & beyond-equilibrium dynamics; iii) prototyping cutting-edge methods and products that can be made available to the public.
The Action was amended to the University of Pavia with starting date 01.06.2021. In the context of the Physics Department at the University of Pavia, Ultrafast Laser Science and – in particular – Ultrafast Microscopy, entered as an entirely brand new research line and did not rely on any pre-existing infrastructure facility nor local network for recruitment. Because of the commitment and dedication of the P.I. the quality of recruited LUXEM Team members, and the unique synergy between LUXEM, the Department of Physics (management, administration, logistics, workshops), the Logistics service of the HI it was possible to achieve all of the above in only 30 months and from the grounds of a complete green-field development.