Light: Science & Applications (May 2023)

Dose-efficient scanning Compton X-ray microscopy

  • Tang Li,
  • J. Lukas Dresselhaus,
  • Nikolay Ivanov,
  • Mauro Prasciolu,
  • Holger Fleckenstein,
  • Oleksandr Yefanov,
  • Wenhui Zhang,
  • David Pennicard,
  • Ann-Christin Dippel,
  • Olof Gutowski,
  • Pablo Villanueva-Perez,
  • Henry N. Chapman,
  • Saša Bajt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41377-023-01176-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract The highest resolution of images of soft matter and biological materials is ultimately limited by modification of the structure, induced by the necessarily high energy of short-wavelength radiation. Imaging the inelastically scattered X-rays at a photon energy of 60 keV (0.02 nm wavelength) offers greater signal per energy transferred to the sample than coherent-scattering techniques such as phase-contrast microscopy and projection holography. We present images of dried, unstained, and unfixed biological objects obtained by scanning Compton X-ray microscopy, at a resolution of about 70 nm. This microscope was realised using novel wedged multilayer Laue lenses that were fabricated to sub-ångström precision, a new wavefront measurement scheme for hard X rays, and efficient pixel-array detectors. The doses required to form these images were as little as 0.02% of the tolerable dose and 0.05% of that needed for phase-contrast imaging at similar resolution using 17 keV photon energy. The images obtained provide a quantitative map of the projected mass density in the sample, as confirmed by imaging a silicon wedge. Based on these results, we find that it should be possible to obtain radiation damage-free images of biological samples at a resolution below 10 nm.