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Integrated Characterization at a Canadian National Facility
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 July 2020
Extract
The pressure of shrinking budgets and downsizing has made it increasingly difficult to meet requests for comprehensive microstructural characterization. In many laboratories, especially those in industry, the expense of maintaining and staffing electron, X-ray and ion beam facilities has resulted in fewer analytical capabilities. At the same time, modern materials and products continue to diversify and increase in complexity, requiring increasingly sophisticated techniques. This growing paradox has increased the need for multiclient, shared-access ‘clusters’ of microanalytical instruments.
The above federal laboratory is mandated to serve both the Canadian public (in a broad sense) and Canadian industry (in the specific sense of collaborative and contract research projects). As a result, the Characterization Group has evolved into an integrated lab competency which compliments other competencies in materials processing (full-scale foundry, industrial rolling facility, Gleeble processing simulator) and mechanical behavior (fracture mechanics, stress and deformation modeling). Building on established expertise in metallography, microprobe, X-ray and TEM, the group has doubled in size (to 20 professionals and 10 major capabilities) and now includes SIMS and surface analysis (Table 1).
- Type
- Shared Resources: Access to Critical Instrumentation
- Information
- Microscopy and Microanalysis , Volume 3 , Issue S2: Proceedings: Microscopy & Microanalysis '97, Microscopy Society of America 55th Annual Meeting, Microbeam Analysis Society 31st Annual Meeting, Histochemical Society 48th Annual Meeting, Cleveland, Ohio, August 10-14, 1997 , August 1997 , pp. 283 - 284
- Copyright
- Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 1997