Dr. Qinfen Gu leads the Powder Diffraction beamline team at the Australian Synchrotron, ANSTO, and serves as an Honorary Principal Fellow in the Department of Chemical Engineering at the University of Melbourne.

Showing 421 - 440 of 569 results

Principal Scientist – X-ray Fluorescence Microscopy
Bully T cells key to next generation flu vaccine
Agreement with J-PARC opens neutron scattering conference
Sika receives its operating licence
International Day of Light: 16 May

Role at ANSTO
Common drug source of insights into formation of 'butterfly' crystals
Insights into the crystallisation process of twin crystals important for drug production.

Media Centre
New advanced material shows extraordinary stability over wide temperature range
Researchers from UNSW have found an extraordinary material that does expand or contract over an extremely wide temperature range and may be one of the most stable materials known.
Expertise in characterising materials for lithium ion batteries
Pioneering work on materials for energy production, such as lithium ion batteries, has made ANSTO a centre of specialist capabilities and expertise.
Symposium on advanced therapy
Science and medical experts meet in Adelaide to discuss great potential of particle therapy in Australia
Collaborative agreement combines extensive scientific infrastructure and expertise

The characterisation of planetary materials
ANSTO provides a range of capabilities using neutrons, X-rays and infrared radiation to study the solids, liquids and gases that might be found in materials in our solar system and beyond.

The characterisation of planetary materials
ANSTO provides a range of capabilities using neutrons, X-rays and infrared radiation to study the solids, liquids and gases that might be found in materials in our solar system and beyond.

Role at ANSTO
Molecular scaffold
Experiments at the Synchrotron enable researchers to produce a 3D structure of a molecular scaffold with role in cancer
3D structure of a molecular scaffold determined
Melbourne researchers have used the Australian Synchrotron to produce structure of molecule known to play a critical role in the development and spread of aggressive cancer.
Advanced materials
Stable, highly conductive 2D nanosheets of boron nitride promising new material.

Infrastructure - Cultural Heritage
In Australia and the Southeast Asia basin, the ANSTO facility offers a wide range of unique nuclear-beam techniques for cultural heritage research.