Advanced Light Source Sets Microscopy Record

Berkeley Lab researchers achieve highest resolution ever with X-ray microscopy.

Written byLawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
| 3 min read
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A record-setting X-ray microscopy experiment may have ushered in a new era for nanoscale imaging. Working at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), a collaboration of researchers used low energy or “soft” X-rays to image structures only five nanometers in size. This resolution, obtained at Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source (ALS), a DOE Office of Science User Facility, is the highest ever achieved with X-ray microscopy.

Using ptychography, a coherent diffractive imaging technique based on high-performance scanning transmission X-ray microscopy (STXM), the collaboration was able to map the chemical composition of lithium iron phosphate nanocrystals after partial dilithiation. The results yielded important new insights into a material of high interest for electrochemical energy storage.

“We have developed diffractive imaging methods capable of achieving a spatial resolution that cannot be matched by conventional imaging schemes,” says David Shapiro, a physicist with the ALS. “We are now entering a stage in which our X-ray microscopes are no longer limited by our optics and we can image at nearly the wavelength of our X-ray light.”

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