4D STEM is an emerging approach to electron microscopy. While it was developed principally for high-resolution studies in materials science, the possibility to collect the entire transmitted flux makes it attractive for cryomicroscopy in application to life science and radiation-sensitive materials where dose efficiency is of utmost importance. We present a workflow to acquire tomographic tilt series of 4D STEM data sets using a segmented diode and an ultrafast pixelated detector, demonstrating the methods using a specimen of a T4 bacteriophage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate the use of a 4-dimensional scanning transmission electron microscope (4D-STEM) to extract atomic cross section information in amorphous materials. We measure the scattering amplitudes of 200 keV electrons in several representative specimens: amorphous carbon, silica, amorphous ice of pure water, and vitrified phosphate buffer solution. Diffraction patterns are recorded by 4D-STEM with or without energy filter at the zero-loss peak.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 4-dimensional modality of a scanning transmission electron microscope (4D-STEM) acquires diffraction images formed by a coherent and focused electron beam scanning the specimen. Newly developed ultrafast detectors offer a possibility to acquire high throughput diffraction patterns at each pixel of the scan, enabling rapid tilt series acquisition for 4D-STEM tomography. Here we present a solution to the problem of synchronizing the electron probe scan with the diffraction image acquisition, and demonstrate on a fast hybrid-pixel detector camera (ARINA, DECTRIS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGiven a limited radiation exposure to be distributed over a discrete number of tilted projections in tomography, the optimal collection of information depends on the tilt increment scheme. Relying on principles of sampling theory, several tilt increment schemes can be compared and quantified. Following reasoning of Saxton, a revised scheme is offered in which the tilt angle increments Δθ are proportional to 1/cosθ.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThick specimens, as encountered in cryo-scanning transmission electron tomography, offer special challenges to conventional reconstruction workflows. The visibility of features, including gold nanoparticles introduced as fiducial markers, varies strongly through the tilt series. As a result, tedious manual refinement may be required in order to produce a successful alignment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent advances in scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) have rekindled interest in multi-channel detectors and prompted the exploration of unconventional scan patterns. These emerging needs are not yet addressed by standard commercial hardware. The system described here incorporates a flexible scan generator that enables exploration of low-acceleration scan patterns, while data are recorded by a scalable eight-channel array of nonmultiplexed analog-to-digital converters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectron microscopy (EM) is the most versatile tool for the study of matter at scales ranging from subatomic to visible. The high vacuum environment and the charged irradiation require careful stabilization of many specimens of interest. Biological samples are particularly sensitive due to their composition of light elements suspended in an aqueous medium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBased on a model of protein denaturation rate limited by an entropy-related barrier, we derive a simple formula for virus inactivation time as a function of temperature. Loss of protein structure is described by two reaction coordinates: conformational disorder of the polymer and wetting by the solvent. These establish a competition between conformational entropy and hydrophobic interaction favoring random coil or globular states, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
April 2005
By performing sound-scattering measurements with a detector array consisting of 62 elements in a flow between two counter-rotating disks we obtain the energy and vorticity power spectra directly in both spatial and temporal domains. Fast-accumulated statistics and a large signal-to-noise ratio allow us to get high-quality data rather effectively and to test scaling laws in details.
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