A high-throughput x-ray microtomography system at the Advanced Photon Source
- 1 April 2001
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Review of Scientific Instruments
- Vol. 72 (4) , 2062-2068
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1355270
Abstract
A third-generation synchrotron radiation source provides enough brilliance to acquire complete tomographic data sets at 100 nm or better resolution in a few minutes. To take advantage of such high-brilliance sources at the Advanced Photon Source, we have constructed a pipelined data acquisition and reconstruction system that combines a fast detector system, high-speed data networks, and massively parallel computers to rapidly acquire the projection data and perform the reconstruction and rendering calculations. With the current setup, a data set can be obtained and reconstructed in tens of minutes. A specialized visualization computer makes rendered three-dimensional (3D) images available to the beamline users minutes after the data acquisition is completed. This system is capable of examining a large number of samples at sub-μm 3D resolution or studying the full 3D structure of a dynamically evolving sample on a 10 min temporal scale. In the near future, we expect to increase the spatial resolution to below 100 nm by using zone-plate x-ray focusing optics and to improve the time resolution by the use of a broadband x-ray monochromator and a faster detector system.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Soft X‐ray microscopy with a cryo scanning transmission X‐ray microscope: II. TomographyJournal of Microscopy, 2000
- X-ray microtomography as a fast three-dimensional imaging technology using a CCD camera coupled with a CdWO4 single-crystal scintillatorPublished by SPIE-Intl Soc Optical Eng ,1997
- Beamline and exposure station for deep x-ray lithography at the advanced photon sourcePublished by SPIE-Intl Soc Optical Eng ,1996
- Ultrahigh-Resolution X-ray TomographyScience, 1994
- The distributed laboratoryCommunications of the ACM, 1992
- Micro-Tomography Using Synchrotron RadiationMRS Proceedings, 1986