Infrastructure

The Department of Materials and Environmental Chemistry (MMK) has a strong tradition and broad expertise in the characterization of materials.

Inserted: Zoltan, Jing, Anumol, Kjell. From left: Mirva, Cheuk-Wai, Aleksander, Ken, Baltzar, Claudia

Accordingly, MMK hosts a large variety of equipment and instrumentation, acquired with substantial support from the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundationthe Swedish Research Council (VR) and the Faculty of Science, Stockholm university, for analyzing structural and physical properties of materials.

Most instrumentation is organized in centers.

The The Electron Microscopy Center (EMC) administers and maintains transmission and scanning electron microscopes. The The Materials Analysis Center at Arrhenius Laboratory (MACAL) supervises X-Ray diffractometers, spectrometers, and equipment for materials property characterization. Further MMK possesses a NMR and a mass spectrometry lab, and is host of the national spark plasma sintering (SPS) facility.

Apart from maintaining research equipment at the highest level of operation, instrument centers take also responsibility in the training of users and ensure that equipment is also available to other researchers at Stockholm University, as well as external users.

Read more about our facilites below.

 

The Electron Microscopy Center (EMC) at the Arrhenius Laboratory has a long tradition of supporting researchers in the fields of materials chemistry and solid-state chemistry, but also many other fields. The first Electron microscope was installed in 1974. Already from the establishment of EMC in 2007, it has been an open facility with users from other higher educational institutes in Sweden and in the world as well as from outside academia.

EMC has traditionally used various techniques in imaging and diffraction together with analytical features for the study of a wide range of materials. Some specialized areas of our research are the synthesis and processing of inorganic as well as bio-based materials, the study of structure and properties and the development of electron crystallography methods.

Materials presently studied comprise mesoporous crystals, nanoparticles and nanostructured materials, soft and biomaterials, et cetera. The typical compositions of the materials span from zeolites, natural minerals, and synthetic oxides to carbon, ceramics, alloys, semiconductors, and also nanocellulose and proteins. These materials find applications in for example batteries, supercapacitors, fuel cells, catalysts, sensors, and biomedicine.

Installation of new SEM and samplepreparation Equipment At EMC

History of Electron Microscopy

Our instruments - SEM

Our instruments - TEM

Fees, policy, and booking 

 

The Materials Analysis Center (MACAL) at the Arrhenius Laboratory consists of several facilities, each managed by a facility manager. The manager oversees equipment maintenance, user accessibility, and efficient training, and possesses expertise in data processing, evaluation, and interpretation.

Currently, there are five different facilities available, read more about them below.

X-ray facility

Optical Spectroscopy

Surface Analysis

Thermal Analysis

Soft matter characterization

Policy and booking

Please review the EMC infrastructure policy before making a booking. 

MACAL policy March 2023 (180 Kb)

To reserve instruments, please use the LIMS booking system.

Link to booking system

 

 

 

 

The Mass Spectrometry Facility provides instrumentation for the analysis of organic compounds using mass spectrometry-based techniques. Users receive support on technical aspects and data processing.

We have a wide range of instrumentation available, they are more extensively presented here.

Mass spectrometry lab

 

The National Spark Plasma Sintering (SPS) facility has been established at Stockholm University. The facility is capable of subjecting the materials to rapid sintering cycles in a vacuum or inert atmosphere. The materials include but are not restricted to ceramics, metals and alloys, intermetallics, composites, and porous materials. The SPS facility can produce sintered materials of both small and large dimensions and handle air-sensitive materials.

More about the facility here

Policy, fees, and booking

Please review SPS infrastructure policy before booking. All fees are listed in the policy.

SPS facility policy and fees 2024 (219 Kb)

To book instruments, please use the LIMS booking system.

Link to the booking system

 

Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) facility at Stockholm University provides resources and expertise in acquisition and interpretation of NMR data from solid materials. Besides NMR methodology development and support for research groups at Stockholm University, the facility is also open to other universities, institutes and industry.

Read more about our solid state NMR facility here

 

Other infrastructure collabs

MMK are involved in infrastructre project across both Sweden and Europe. Please find further information below.

ARTEMI is the National Research Infrastructure for Advanced Electron Microscopy, as appointed by the Swedish Research Council (VR) and constitutes a distributed infrastructure that involve six partner universities with complementary instrumentation and methodologies.

ARTEMI - Swedish Research Infrastructure for Advanced Electron Microscopy

CEM4MAT is an initiative from the electron microscopy (EM) facilities in the Stockholm-Uppsala region.

This is a regional platform to make the Transmission Electron Microscopy based research infrastructure accessible and transparent for external and internal users. The four nodes of CEM4MAT, specialised in Materials Sciences, are Uppsala University, Stockholm University, KTH Royal Institute of Technology and SWERIM. 

CEM4MAT, Centre of Electron Microscopy for Materials Sciences

The European Spallation Source is under construction on the outskirts of Lund, a city in southern Sweden. The facility's unique capabilities will both greatly exceed and complement those of today's leading neutron sources, enabling new opportunities for researchers across the spectrum of scientific discovery, including materials and life sciences, energy, environmental technology, cultural heritage and fundamental physics.

ESS - European Spallation Source

MAX IV Laboratory is a Swedish national laboratory providing scientists with the most brilliant X-rays for research with Lund University as the host university. The facility is funded primarily by Swedish and international research funders, consortia, and 14 Swedish research universities. MAX IV delivers high-quality X-ray light for research in materials and life sciences. 

MAX IV

NordTEMhub, is a Nordic University hub, as defined by NordForsk, within advanced electron microscopy. The aim is to make use of the well-established environments in the Nordic, intensify our collaboration between nodes, provide access, optimize instrument use and build Nordic competence on advanced microscopy with particular emphasis on the young generation.

NordTEMHub

High quality and accessible infrastructures unlock the skills of researchers and the possibilities of science. Within the CIVIS alliance there are opportunites of instrastrucute sharing.

RIS4CIVIS - Sharing Research Infrastructures

Active European Research Infrastructure Consortia (ERICs)

 

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