Search results for "Microscopy"
showing 10 items of 3390 documents
Visualizing cell death in experimental focal cerebral ischemia: promises, problems, and perspectives
2011
One of the hallmarks of stroke pathophysiology is the widespread death of many different types of brain cells. As our understanding of the complex disease that is stroke has grown, it is now generally accepted that various different mechanisms can result in cell damage and eventual death. A plethora of techniques is available to identify various pathological features of cell death in stroke; each has its own drawbacks and pitfalls, and most are unable to distinguish between different types of cell death, which partially explains the widespread misuse of many terms. The purpose of this review is to summarize the standard histopathological and immunohistochemical techniques used to identify …
Characterisation of beam focus quality in biomedical nuclear microscopy: A Fourier optics approach
2009
Abstract The central peak widths of the 2D-autocorrelation function have been investigated as a Figure of Merit (FoM) of focus quality in nuclear microscopy using a quadrupole triplet lens system. The beam focus could be reliably characterised for direct scanning transmission ion microscopy (direct-STIM) images obtained with fluences as small as 5.8 × 10 9 ions cm - 2 which colocalisation tests showed did not introduce significant beam-induced changes in the cells.
Application of atomic and nuclear techniques to the study of inhomogeneities in electrodeposited α-particle sources
2002
Three α-particle sources made by different methods of electrodeposition were analysed using α-particle spectrometry, Rutherford backscattering (RBS), and atomic force microscopy (AFM) on several surface zones. The thickness and homogeneity of these sources was studied using RBS, and the results were analysed jointly with those obtained with α-particle spectrometry and AFM techniques. The comparison of the electrodeposition methods showed that the most homogeneous electrodeposited zones corresponded to the source made with a stirring cathode.
Nanostructuring and strengthening of LiF crystals by swift heavy ions: AFM, XRD and nanoindentation study
2012
Abstract Modifications of the structure and micromechanical properties of LiF crystals under high-fluence irradiation (10 11 –10 13 ions cm −2 ) with swift C, Ti, Au and U ions of the specific energy of 11.1 MeV/u have been studied. In the case of heavy ions (U, Au), the AFM and SEM results reveal the bulk nanostructure consisting of columnar grains with nano-scale dimensions (50–100 nm). For lighter C ions the structure enriched with prismatic dislocation loops has been observed. High-resolution XRD reciprocal space maps for nano-structured LiF expose a mosaic-type structure with low-angle boundaries between grains.
Ion-induced fluorescence imaging of endosomes
2013
Abstract Imaging laboratories at Jyvaskyla and Singapore are collaborating on the development of fluorescence imaging of cytoplasmic endosomes using a combination of proton induced fluorescence (PIF) with direct Scanning Transmission Ion Microscopy (direct-STIM) for sub-cellular structural imaging. A549 lung carcinoma cells were cultivated and stained for epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and receptor α2β1 integrin. In this paper, we demonstrate that cells can be imaged at sub-150 nm resolution using the PIF technique. In addition, the same target cell was imaged at 50 and 25 nm resolution by using proton and He-STIM, respectively. The combination of both techniques offer a powerful t…
Angular and lateral spreading of ion beams in biomedical nuclear microscopy
2009
Abstract Nuclear scattering from target atoms gives rise to a spatial broadening of energetic ion beams penetrating matter. The spatial broadening of the ion beam presents an ultimate limit to the resolving power that can be achieved in nuclear microscopy methods. The pressing of the attainable resolution limit in biomedical nuclear microscopy to dimensions approaching 10 nm, or so, implies the fundamental limitation from ion-target scattering will become increasingly significant. This effect has been investigated by a combined analytical and numerical computational approach to determine the extent and how single and multiple scattering processes limit the resolution for analysis with 2 MeV…
Thin film growth into the ion track structures in polyimide by atomic layer deposition
2017
Abstract High-aspect ratio porous structures with controllable pore diameters and without a stiff substrate can be fabricated using the ion track technique. Atomic layer deposition is an ideal technique for depositing thin films and functional surfaces on complicated 3D structures due to the high conformality of the films. In this work, we studied Al2O3 and TiO2 films grown by ALD on pristine polyimide (Kapton HN) membranes as well as polyimide membranes etched in sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) and boric acid (BO3) solution by means of RBS, PIXE, SEM-EDX and helium ion microcopy (HIM). The focus was on the first ALD growth cycles. The areal density of Al2O3 film in the 400 cycle sample was det…
Annealing reactions in lead implanted copper
2002
Abstract The terminal solubility of Pb in Cu is extremely low and does not exceed 0.09 at.% at 875 K. Ion implantation of lead ions at 100 keV into Cu single crystals produces metastable solutions. Annealing of the samples causes redistribution of the implanted atoms to equilibrium or near-equilibrium aggregate states which may be reflected in a change in the type of impurity lattice location in the host matrix. We have studied the effect of annealing on single crystalline Cu implanted at temperatures around 375 K with Pb to a concentration of a 1–2 at.%. Rutherford backscattering/channeling analysis and transmission electron microscopy of the as-implanted samples have shown that the implan…
Formation of cobalt silicide from filter metal vacuum arc deposited films
2006
The thermal reaction of Co film deposited on Si(111) surfaces by a high current filter metal vacuum arc (FMEVAD) system has been studied. After deposition the films were annealed over the 400-900 degrees C temperature range for 30 min. Rutherford backscattering spectrometry (RBS) was used to characterize the elemental depth distributions in the films subjected to different annealing temperatures. Ordered chemical phases were determined by glancing-incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXRD) and the morphology was determined by cross section transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The results show that the phases formed are Co2Si at 400 degrees C, CoSi + Coo at 500 degrees C, CoSi + CoSi2 at 600 deg…
MeV–GeV ion induced dislocation loops in LiF crystals
2014
Abstract Formation of prismatic dislocation loops and evolution of dislocation structure in LiF crystals irradiated with swift 238U and 36S ions of specific energy 11 MeV/u at fluences up to 1013 ions cm−2 has been investigated using chemical etching and AFM. It has been shown that prismatic dislocations are formed in the stage of track overlapping above threshold fluences Φ ≈ 109 U cm−2 and Φ ≈ 1010 S cm−2. The diameter of dislocation loops reaches 600–1000 nm for 238U ions and 200 nm for 36S ions. The dislocations created by 238U ions are arranged in rows along the direction of ion beam, whereas 36S ions create freely distributed dislocation loops each of them being oriented along the ion…