*LANSCE Neutron Scattering School on Soft Matter*

*Neutron Techniques in Basic and Applied Science*

*lansce.lanl.gov/neutronschool*

*12-21 September 2012*

*Lujan Neutron Scattering Center, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los
Alamos New Mexico*

The 2012 Lujan Neutron Scattering School will cover neutron techniques in
basic and applied soft matter research with a focus on applications in
energy, medical and materials science. The school will include a special
track on neutron crystallography for structural enzymology. Participants
will receive travel and local support. Visit *lansce.lanl.gov/neutronschool
*for school details support details and to apply.

*Educational Goals*:

The 2012 LANSCE School on Neutron Scattering will focus on outstanding
issues in fundamental and applied soft matter research where neutrons can
and do make important contributions. It will provide an overview and
training, though hands-on exercises, of concepts, instruments and data
analysis in neutron scattering, diffraction, reflection and radiographic
imaging. The school will focus on issues in soft matter research and their
applications in energy, medical and materials sciences. The school will
include a special track on crystallography for structural enzymology.
Information on this special track is included below.

*Intended Audience:*

The Neutron Scattering School on Soft Matter is intended primarily for
Ph.D. graduate students in the physical, chemical or biological sciences or
postdoctoral researchers requiring an introduction to neutron scattering
techniques in soft condensed matter or structural enzymology for their
research. Students should have had a basic introduction in scattering or
diffraction by successfully completing an appropriate course in physics,
physical chemistry or biophysical chemistry.

*Overview*:

*Topics*:

The school will cover:

·         The basic concepts of neutron production, scattering methods and
instrumentation.

·         Introduction to soft matter with emphasis on areas of basic and
applied research in energy, medical and materials topics where neutrons can
and do make fundamental contributions.

·         The concepts behind neutron instrumentation and experimental
approaches to address issues in soft matter.

·         The why and how of deuteration in neutron scattering.

·         Detailed case studies in soft matter research using small-angle
neutron scattering, neutron reflectometry, chemical neutron spectroscopy,
diffraction and radiography.

·         Technical aspects of measurement techniques and data analysis.

·         Computational techniques that complement and aid in the planning,
analysis and interpretation of neutron measurements.

·         An open session for discussion and/or a lecture of an additional
topic selected by the students.

·         Additional topics, outlined below, in protein crystallography
techniques will be covered in the special track on structural enzymology.

*Practicals for the Course in Soft Matter*:

The lectures will be complemented by practical hands-on exercises applying
concepts to specific problems. Students in the soft matter school will
chose among exercises using:

·         Small-angle neutron scattering: LQD.

·         Neutron reflectometry: SPEAR.

·         Chemical Neutron Spectroscopy: FDS.

·         Diffraction: SMARTS.

·         Radiographic imaging.

·         Local structure and pair distribution functions: NPDF & HIPD.



Students will make presentations on their findings on the final day of the
school.

*Special track for protein crystallography using joint neutron and X-ray
diffraction for structural enzymology:*

*Requirements:*

Students should have a general knowledge of protein crystallography and a
strong biochemistry background. The special track is intended for PhD
students and early career postdocs interested in using neutrons to better
understand enzyme structure and mechanism.

*Overview:*

The Protein Crystallography Station is a high-performance beamline that
enables many areas of research in structural biology. Joint neutron and
X-ray crystallography can give high resolution information about hydration
and dynamics of protein structure, protonation of key active site amino
acid residues (charged vs. neutral), nature and orientation of hydrogen
bond of water molecular (water networks, distinguishing between OH- or
H+or even H
3O+), interaction and binding mode of drugs/inhibitors, substrates, or
transition state intermediates for drug design or enzyme engineering.

In the special track students will learn about:

·         protein expression and partial vs. full perdeuteration

·         practical methods for large crystal growth

·         proper sample mounting and vapor H/D exchange

·         data collection and Laue time-of-flight data processing (Ntrek;
Lauenorm)

·         Preparing PDB and data files for joint neutron and X-ray
structure refinement

*Scientific Topics & Applications*

·         Structural enzymology: understanding how enzymes work

·         Biofuels (both cellulosic ethanol and algal oil)

·         Structure-based drug design and how neutrons provide unique
information

·         Quantum enzymology: quantum chemical calculations using explicit
H atom positions from neutron experiments (predicting reaction trajectories)

*To Apply:*

Apply on the web at *lansce.lanl.gov/neutronschool*.  Application materials
include:

·         A statement by the applicant of anticipated benefits of the
neutron scattering school to the individual research program.

·         Two letters of reference that must be submitted directly to the
school by e-mail or hard copy.

*Important dates*:

·         22 June: deadline for all application materials.

·         25 June: notifications to applicants.

·         2 July: confirmation of attendance by successful applicants.
Deadline for foreign national students to submit required documentation.

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