2014's Top-10 Scientific Achievements at Brookhaven Lab

From new insights into the building blocks of matter to advances in understanding batteries, superconductors, and a protein that could help fight cancer, 2014 was a year of stunning successes for the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory. Oh, and did we mention the opening of a brand new facility that will push the limits of discovery across the scientific spectrum? For details on these and the rest of our Top-10 breakthroughs, check out the items below. You can follow Brookhaven Lab on FacebookTwitter, and Tumblr to learn about the discoveries of 2015 as they happen.

Written byBrookhaven National Laboratory
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1. National Synchrotron Light Source II Achieves 'First Light'  

Opening a new era of scientific discovery at Brookhaven Lab, the brightest synchrotron light source in the world delivered its first x-ray beams on October 23, 2014. Soon researchers from around the world will start using the powerful x-rays produced by the National Synchrotron Light Source II (NSLS-II) to advance their research on everything from new energy storage materials to developing new drugs to fight disease. As of this writing, all seven of the initial experimental stations designed to receive x-rays from the ½-mile-circumference electron storage ring had received 'first light.' Scientists running these "beamlines" will begin experiments this year. An additional 23 beamlines are under construction or in the planning stages, and there's room at NSLS-II for 30 more. With the photons shining, 2015 promises to be a bright year for science at NSLS-II.

2. Physicists Narrow Search for Solution to Proton Spin Puzzle 

Results from experiments at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), a 2.4-mile-circumference particle collider at Brookhaven Lab, reveal new insights about how quarks and gluons—the subatomic building blocks of protons—contribute to proton "spin." The new precision measurements will help solve a mystery that has puzzled physicists since the 1980s, showing for the first time that gluons make a significant contribution to proton spin and that transient "sea quarks"—which form primarily when gluons split—also play a role. Pinpointing where spin comes from could yield new information about the mechanisms of the complex subatomic particle interactions within protons, the effects of spin on other properties, and perhaps even ways to control those properties for future, unforeseen applications. RHIC is the world's only facility capable of colliding spin-polarized protons to perform these precision studies.

3. New Method Provides Nanoscale Details of Electrochemical Reactions in Electric Vehicle Battery Materials 

Using a new method to track the electrochemical reactions that take place in a common electric vehicle battery material, scientists at Brookhaven have gained new insight into why fast charging inhibits this material's performance. The team used a combination of techniques to study the material under operating conditions and at the nanometer scale at the National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS), Brookhaven's original synchrotron x-ray light source, which closed at the end of September after 32 years of successful operation. The resulting high-resolution images and electrochemical "fingerprint" show, pixel by pixel, where lithium ions remain in the material, where they've been removed, and other potentially interesting electrochemical details. The findings provide the first direct experimental evidence to support a particular model of the electrochemical reaction, and could inform battery makers' efforts to optimize materials for faster-charging batteries with higher capacity. 

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