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BioMAX - the first macromolecular crystallography beamline at MAX IV Laboratory.

Authors :
Ursby T
Åhnberg K
Appio R
Aurelius O
Barczyk A
Bartalesi A
Bjelčić M
Bolmsten F
Cerenius Y
Doak RB
Eguiraun M
Eriksson T
Friel RJ
Gorgisyan I
Gross A
Haghighat V
Hennies F
Jagudin E
Norsk Jensen B
Jeppsson T
Kloos M
Lidon-Simon J
de Lima GMA
Lizatovic R
Lundin M
Milan-Otero A
Milas M
Nan J
Nardella A
Rosborg A
Shilova A
Shoeman RL
Siewert F
Sondhauss P
Talibov VO
Tarawneh H
Thånell J
Thunnissen M
Unge J
Ward C
Gonzalez A
Mueller U
Source :
Journal of synchrotron radiation [J Synchrotron Radiat] 2020 Sep 01; Vol. 27 (Pt 5), pp. 1415-1429. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Aug 05.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

BioMAX is the first macromolecular crystallography beamline at the MAX IV Laboratory 3 GeV storage ring, which is the first operational multi-bend achromat storage ring. Due to the low-emittance storage ring, BioMAX has a parallel, high-intensity X-ray beam, even when focused down to 20 µm × 5 µm using the bendable focusing mirrors. The beam is tunable in the energy range 5-25 keV using the in-vacuum undulator and the horizontally deflecting double-crystal monochromator. BioMAX is equipped with an MD3 diffractometer, an ISARA high-capacity sample changer and an EIGER 16M hybrid pixel detector. Data collection at BioMAX is controlled using the newly developed MXCuBE3 graphical user interface, and sample tracking is handled by ISPyB. The computing infrastructure includes data storage and processing both at MAX IV and the Lund University supercomputing center LUNARC. With state-of-the-art instrumentation, a high degree of automation, a user-friendly control system interface and remote operation, BioMAX provides an excellent facility for most macromolecular crystallography experiments. Serial crystallography using either a high-viscosity extruder injector or the MD3 as a fixed-target scanner is already implemented. The serial crystallography activities at MAX IV Laboratory will be further developed at the microfocus beamline MicroMAX, when it comes into operation in 2022. MicroMAX will have a 1 µm × 1 µm beam focus and a flux up to 10 <superscript>15</superscript>  photons s <superscript>-1</superscript> with main applications in serial crystallography, room-temperature structure determinations and time-resolved experiments.<br /> (open access.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1600-5775
Volume :
27
Issue :
Pt 5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of synchrotron radiation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32876619
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600577520008723