IUCrJ (Mar 2018)

Electron crystallography with the EIGER detector

  • Gemma Tinti,
  • Erik Fröjdh,
  • Eric van Genderen,
  • Tim Gruene,
  • Bernd Schmitt,
  • D. A. Matthijs de Winter,
  • Bert M. Weckhuysen,
  • Jan Pieter Abrahams

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1107/S2052252518000945
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 2
pp. 190 – 199

Abstract

Read online

Electron crystallography is a discipline that currently attracts much attention as method for inorganic, organic and macromolecular structure solution. EIGER, a direct-detection hybrid pixel detector developed at the Paul Scherrer Institut, Switzerland, has been tested for electron diffraction in a transmission electron microscope. EIGER features a pixel pitch of 75 × 75 µm2, frame rates up to 23 kHz and a dead time between frames as low as 3 µs. Cluster size and modulation transfer functions of the detector at 100, 200 and 300 keV electron energies are reported and the data quality is demonstrated by structure determination of a SAPO-34 zeotype from electron diffraction data.

Keywords