Pieter Tack
Ghent University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pieter Tack.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2014
Matthieu Boone; Jan Garrevoet; Pieter Tack; Oliver Scharf; David P. Cormode; Denis Van Loo; Elin Pauwels; Manuel Dierick; Laszlo Vincze; Luc Van Hoorebeke
High resolution X-ray radiography and computed tomography are excellent techniques for non-destructive characterization of an object under investigation at a spatial resolution in the micrometer range. However, as the image contrast depends on both chemical composition and material density, no chemical information is obtained from this data. Furthermore, lab-based measurements are affected by the polychromatic X-ray beam, which results in beam hardening effects. New types of X-ray detectors which provide spectral information on the measured X-ray beam can help to overcome these limitations. In this paper, an energy dispersive CCD detector with high spectral resolution is characterized for use in high resolution radiography and tomography, where a focus is put on the experimental conditions and requirements of both measurement techniques.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Pieter Tack; Marine Cotte; Stephen Bauters; Emmanuel Brun; Dipanjan Banerjee; Wim Bras; Claudio Ferrero; Daniel Delattre; Vito Mocella; Laszlo Vincze
The writing in carbonized Herculaneum scrolls, covered and preserved by the pyroclastic events of the Vesuvius in 79 AD, was recently revealed using X-ray phase-contrast tomography, without the need of unrolling the sensitive scrolls. Unfortunately, some of the text is difficult to read due to the interference of the papyrus fibers crossing the written text vertically and horizontally. Recently, lead was found as an elemental constituent in the writing, rendering the text more clearly readable when monitoring the lead X-ray fluorescence signal. Here, several hypotheses are postulated for the origin and state of lead in the papyrus writing. Multi-scale X-ray fluorescence micro-imaging, Monte Carlo quantification and X-ray absorption microspectroscopy experiments are used to provide additional information on the ink composition, in an attempt to determine the origin of the lead in the Herculaneum scrolls and validate the postulated hypotheses.
Analytical Chemistry | 2014
Pieter Tack; Jan Garrevoet; Stephen Bauters; Bart Vekemans; Brecht Laforce; Eric Van Ranst; Dipanjan Banerjee; Alessandro Longo; Wim Bras; Laszlo Vincze
X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy is a well-known nondestructive technique that allows for chemical state and local structure determination. Spatially resolved oxidation state imaging is possible performing full-field transmission mode XANES experiments, providing chemical state information on the illuminated sample area, but these experiments are limited to thin, concentrated samples. Here we present the use of a unique energy dispersive (ED) pnCCD detector, the SLcam, for full-field fluorescence mode XANES experiments, thereby significantly relaxing the constraints on sample thickness. Using this new detection methodology, spatially resolved chemical state information on millimeter-sized sample areas can be obtained with microscopic resolution in moderate measuring times (less than 15 h), obtaining a XANES profile for each of nearly 70,000 points in a single measurement without the need of scanning the sample through the beam. Besides a description of the use of this detector for micro-XANES applications, we also present the proof of concept for fluorescence mode micro-XANES using a Fe(0)/Fe2O3 model sample and a Nitisol soil sample, which was measured to obtain iron chemical state distribution information.
Analytical Chemistry | 2014
Jan Garrevoet; Bart Vekemans; Pieter Tack; Björn De Samber; Sylvia Schmitz; Frank E. Brenker; Gerald Falkenberg; Laszlo Vincze
A new three-dimensional (3D) micro X-ray fluorescence (μXRF) methodology based on a novel 2D energy dispersive CCD detector has been developed and evaluated at the P06 beamline of the Petra-III storage ring (DESY) in Hamburg, Germany. This method is based on the illumination of the investigated sample cross-section by a horizontally focused beam (vertical sheet beam) while fluorescent X-rays are detected perpendicularly to the sheet beam by a 2D energy dispersive (ED) CCD detector allowing the collection of 2D cross-sectional elemental images of a certain depth within the sample, limited only by signal self-absorption effects. 3D elemental information is obtained by a linear scan of the sample in the horizontal direction across the vertically oriented sheet beam and combining the detected cross-sectional images into a 3D elemental distribution data set. Results of the 3D μXRF analysis of mineral inclusions in natural deep Earth diamonds are presented to illustrate this new methodology.
RSC Advances | 2016
Pieter Tack; Stephen Bauters; John C. Mauro; Morten Mattrup Smedskjær; Bart Vekemans; Dipanjan Banerjee; Wim Bras; Laszlo Vincze
It is crucial to understand the structural origins of macroscopic properties in silicate glasses for their high-tech applications. An example of such an application is chemically strengthened boroaluminosilicate glasses that are exposed to an ion exchange process during which alkali ions (e.g. Na+) are replaced by larger (e.g. K+) ions. Despite the empirically thorough understanding of this exchange process, much less is known about the fundamental physics of the process. Since Fe atoms are a suitable probe for monitoring chemical stress-induced changes in the local structure in the chemically strengthened glasses, a set of chemically strengthened boroaluminosilicate glasses containing 1 mol% Fe2O3 are here studied using depth-resolved confocal X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) and extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy. Information on the Fe oxidation state, coordination number, and bond distance as a function of the sample depth and glass composition is obtained. These new insights on chemical stress-induced changes will aid in the further development and improvement of such damage-resistant glasses.
Dalton Transactions | 2018
Petra Lommens; Pieter Tack; Luce Vander Elst; Isabel Van Driessche; Laszlo Vincze; Davy Sinnaeve
Complexes of Cu(ii) with triethanolamine (TEA) are widely used in aqueous precursor solutions of Cu-based catalysts and metal oxides such as YBa2Cu3O7-δ superconductors. An outstanding question is whether such complexes are multinuclear in solution. Here, we use various spectroscopic techniques to unmistakably prove the existence of such multimers. Firstly, we introduce an original approach based on NMR spectroscopy and the Evans method that establishes the existence of multimers in aqueous solution at pH 4 and higher, and allows precise monitoring of the formation of these complexes with increasing pH. Secondly, we use extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy to show that a Cu-Cu interaction exists at pH 9.5, which is not observed in acidic (pH 2) solutions. Finally, NMRD measurements reveal additional structural information regarding the multinuclear complexes. Knowledge concerning the nature of Cu(ii)-TEA complexes in solution is of great relevance in view of the design of speciation models to predict the stability of copper triethanolamine-based precursor solutions.
Analytical Chemistry | 2018
Stephen Bauters; Pieter Tack; Jennifer Rudloff-Grund; Dipanjan Banerjee; Alessandro Longo; Bart Vekemans; Wim Bras; Frank E. Brenker; Roelof van Silfhout; Laszlo Vincze
A novel plug-and-play setup based on polycapillary X-ray optics enables three-dimensional (3D) confocal X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and X-ray absorption spectroscopy down to 8 × 8 × 11 μm3 (17 keV) at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility Collaborative Research Group Dutch-Belgian Beamline, BM26A. A complete description and analytical characterization is presented, together with two recently performed experimental cases. In Deep Earth diamond São Luiz-Frankfurt am Main 16, an olivine-rich inclusion was mapped with full 3D XRF elemental imaging. The preliminary tests on Iron Gall ink contained in an historical document, a letter from the court of King Philip II of Spain, reveal both the delicate nature of Iron Gall ink and the lack of Fe-Ni chemical bonding.
Analytical Chemistry | 2017
Pieter Tack; Bart Vekemans; Brecht Laforce; Jennifer Rudloff-Grund; Willinton Y. Hernández; Jan Garrevoet; Gerald Falkenberg; Frank E. Brenker; Pascal Van Der Voort; Laszlo Vincze
Using X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy, information on the local chemical structure and oxidation state of an element of interest can be acquired. Conventionally, this information can be obtained in a spatially resolved manner by scanning a sample through a focused X-ray beam. Recently, full-field methods have been developed to obtain direct 2D chemical state information by imaging a large sample area. These methods are usually in transmission mode, thus restricting the use to thin and transmitting samples. Here, a fluorescence method is displayed using an energy-dispersive pnCCD detector, the SLcam, characterized by measurement times far superior to what is generally applicable. Additionally, this method operates in confocal mode, thus providing direct 3D spatially resolved chemical state information from a selected subvolume of a sample, without the need of rotating a sample. The method is applied to two samples: a gold-supported magnesia catalyst (Au/MgO) and a natural diamond containing Fe-rich inclusions. Both samples provide XANES spectra that can be overlapped with reference XANES spectra, allowing this method to be used for fingerprinting and linear combination analysis of known XANES reference compounds.
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2015
Damien Bourgeois; B. Burt-Pichat; Xavier F. Le Goff; Jan Garrevoet; Pieter Tack; Gerald Falkenberg; Luc Van Hoorebeke; Laszlo Vincze; Melissa A. Denecke; Daniel Meyer; Claude Vidaud; Georges Boivin
Spectrochimica Acta Part B: Atomic Spectroscopy | 2015
Lien Van de Voorde; Bart Vekemans; Eddy Verhaeven; Pieter Tack; Robin De Wolf; Jan Garrevoet; Peter Vandenabeele; Laszlo Vincze