Journal of Synchrotron Radiation (May 2022)

Dose-efficient multimodal microscopy of human tissue at a hard X-ray nanoprobe beamline

  • Simone Sala,
  • Yuhe Zhang,
  • Nathaly De La Rosa,
  • Till Dreier,
  • Maik Kahnt,
  • Max Langer,
  • Lars B. Dahlin,
  • Martin Bech,
  • Pablo Villanueva-Perez,
  • Sebastian Kalbfleisch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600577522001874
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 3
pp. 807 – 815

Abstract

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X-ray fluorescence microscopy performed at nanofocusing synchrotron beamlines produces quantitative elemental distribution maps at unprecedented resolution (down to a few tens of nanometres), at the expense of relatively long measuring times and high absorbed doses. In this work, a method was implemented in which fast low-dose in-line holography was used to produce quantitative electron density maps at the mesoscale prior to nanoscale X-ray fluorescence acquisition. These maps ensure more efficient fluorescence scans and the reduction of the total absorbed dose, often relevant for radiation-sensitive (e.g. biological) samples. This multimodal microscopy approach was demonstrated on human sural nerve tissue. The two imaging modes provide complementary information at a comparable resolution, ultimately limited by the focal spot size. The experimental setup presented allows the user to swap between them in a flexible and reproducible fashion, as well as to easily adapt the scanning parameters during an experiment to fine-tune resolution and field of view.

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