| Literature DB >> 26434767 |
Vadim Migunov1, Henning Ryll2, Xiaodong Zhuge3, Martin Simson4, Lothar Strüder2,5, K Joost Batenburg3,6,7, Lothar Houben1, Rafal E Dunin-Borkowski1.
Abstract
We demonstrate the ability to record a tomographic tilt series containing 3487 images in only 3.5 s by using a direct electron detector in a transmission electron microscope. The electron dose is lower by at least one order of magnitude when compared with that used to record a conventional tilt series of fewer than 100 images in 15-60 minutes and the overall signal-to-noise ratio is greater than 4. Our results, which are illustrated for an inorganic nanotube, are important for ultra-low-dose electron tomography of electron-beam-sensitive specimens and real-time dynamic electron tomography of nanoscale objects with sub-ms temporal resolution.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26434767 PMCID: PMC4592966 DOI: 10.1038/srep14516
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Continuous tilt series acquisition of a (LaCeS)1.2CrS2 nanotube on a lacey C support.
The tilt series comprises 3487 images taken over a tilt range of −70° to +30°. The label in each of the four frames in the left panel indicates the time elapsed and the viewing angle. The scale bar is 200 nm. The right panel shows the filling of Fourier space with projection data according to the Fourier slice theorem, both for a subset of 50 images extracted in 2° increments and for the full tilt series of 3487 images with an increment of ~0.029°. The subset is representative of a conventional tilt series experiment that leaves gaps in Fourier space between successive tilt angles. No gaps are visible for the more densely sampled dataset up to the Nyquist frequency for an image frame size of below 2/ΔΘ ≈ 4 k pixels.
Figure 2Rendering of a three-dimensional DART reconstruction of the nanotube (orange) and the underlying amorphous C support film (blue).
Figure 3Comparison between SIRT (red frames, left) and DART (blue frames, right) tomographic reconstructions of the nanotube.
The centre of reconstructed volume is shown as sections of the xy, yz and xz planes. The green crosses show the positions of the ortho-slices.