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LamNI – an instrument for X-ray scanning microscopy in lamino­graphy geometry

Across all branches of science, medicine and engineering, high-resolution microscopy is required to understand functionality. Although optical methods have been developed to ‘defeat’ the diffraction limit and produce 3D images, and electrons have proven ever more useful in creating pictures of small...

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Autores principales: Holler, Mirko, Odstrčil, Michal, Guizar-Sicairos, Manuel, Lebugle, Maxime, Frommherz, Ulrich, Lachat, Thierry, Bunk, Oliver, Raabe, Joerg, Aeppli, Gabriel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Union of Crystallography 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7206541/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32381775
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1600577520003586
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author Holler, Mirko
Odstrčil, Michal
Guizar-Sicairos, Manuel
Lebugle, Maxime
Frommherz, Ulrich
Lachat, Thierry
Bunk, Oliver
Raabe, Joerg
Aeppli, Gabriel
author_facet Holler, Mirko
Odstrčil, Michal
Guizar-Sicairos, Manuel
Lebugle, Maxime
Frommherz, Ulrich
Lachat, Thierry
Bunk, Oliver
Raabe, Joerg
Aeppli, Gabriel
author_sort Holler, Mirko
collection PubMed
description Across all branches of science, medicine and engineering, high-resolution microscopy is required to understand functionality. Although optical methods have been developed to ‘defeat’ the diffraction limit and produce 3D images, and electrons have proven ever more useful in creating pictures of small objects or thin sections, so far there is no substitute for X-ray microscopy in providing multiscale 3D images of objects with a single instrument and minimal labeling and preparation. A powerful technique proven to continuously access length scales from 10 nm to 10 µm is ptychographic X-ray computed tomography, which, on account of the orthogonality of the tomographic rotation axis to the illuminating beam, still has the limitation of necessitating pillar-shaped samples of small (ca 10 µm) diameter. Large-area planar samples are common in science and engineering, and it is therefore highly desirable to create an X-ray microscope that can examine such samples without the extraction of pillars. Computed lamino­graphy, where the axis of rotation is not perpendicular to the illumination direction, solves this problem. This entailed the development of a new instrument, LamNI, dedicated to high-resolution 3D scanning X-ray microscopy via hard X-ray ptychographic lamino­graphy. Scanning precision is achieved by a dedicated interferometry scheme and the instrument covers a scan range of 12 mm × 12 mm with a position stability of 2 nm and positioning errors below 5 nm. A new feature of LamNI is a pair of counter-rotating stages carrying the sample and interferometric mirrors, respectively.
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spelling pubmed-72065412020-05-19 LamNI – an instrument for X-ray scanning microscopy in lamino­graphy geometry Holler, Mirko Odstrčil, Michal Guizar-Sicairos, Manuel Lebugle, Maxime Frommherz, Ulrich Lachat, Thierry Bunk, Oliver Raabe, Joerg Aeppli, Gabriel J Synchrotron Radiat Research Papers Across all branches of science, medicine and engineering, high-resolution microscopy is required to understand functionality. Although optical methods have been developed to ‘defeat’ the diffraction limit and produce 3D images, and electrons have proven ever more useful in creating pictures of small objects or thin sections, so far there is no substitute for X-ray microscopy in providing multiscale 3D images of objects with a single instrument and minimal labeling and preparation. A powerful technique proven to continuously access length scales from 10 nm to 10 µm is ptychographic X-ray computed tomography, which, on account of the orthogonality of the tomographic rotation axis to the illuminating beam, still has the limitation of necessitating pillar-shaped samples of small (ca 10 µm) diameter. Large-area planar samples are common in science and engineering, and it is therefore highly desirable to create an X-ray microscope that can examine such samples without the extraction of pillars. Computed lamino­graphy, where the axis of rotation is not perpendicular to the illumination direction, solves this problem. This entailed the development of a new instrument, LamNI, dedicated to high-resolution 3D scanning X-ray microscopy via hard X-ray ptychographic lamino­graphy. Scanning precision is achieved by a dedicated interferometry scheme and the instrument covers a scan range of 12 mm × 12 mm with a position stability of 2 nm and positioning errors below 5 nm. A new feature of LamNI is a pair of counter-rotating stages carrying the sample and interferometric mirrors, respectively. International Union of Crystallography 2020-04-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7206541/ /pubmed/32381775 http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1600577520003586 Text en © Holler et al. 2020 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited.http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
spellingShingle Research Papers
Holler, Mirko
Odstrčil, Michal
Guizar-Sicairos, Manuel
Lebugle, Maxime
Frommherz, Ulrich
Lachat, Thierry
Bunk, Oliver
Raabe, Joerg
Aeppli, Gabriel
LamNI – an instrument for X-ray scanning microscopy in lamino­graphy geometry
title LamNI – an instrument for X-ray scanning microscopy in lamino­graphy geometry
title_full LamNI – an instrument for X-ray scanning microscopy in lamino­graphy geometry
title_fullStr LamNI – an instrument for X-ray scanning microscopy in lamino­graphy geometry
title_full_unstemmed LamNI – an instrument for X-ray scanning microscopy in lamino­graphy geometry
title_short LamNI – an instrument for X-ray scanning microscopy in lamino­graphy geometry
title_sort lamni – an instrument for x-ray scanning microscopy in lamino­graphy geometry
topic Research Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7206541/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32381775
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1600577520003586
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