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Microscope Basics Christos Savva Rs

This document provides an overview of transmission electron microscopy (TEM). It discusses the history and development of TEM from 1931 to 2021, including the replacement of glass lenses with electromagnetic lenses. It describes key components of a TEM, such as the electron gun, condenser lenses, objective lens, and detectors. It also covers topics like wave coherence, lens aberrations, chromatic aberration, specimen holders, accelerating voltage choice, and detectors. The document aims to give readers a basic understanding of TEM technology and considerations.

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Andy Black
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views

Microscope Basics Christos Savva Rs

This document provides an overview of transmission electron microscopy (TEM). It discusses the history and development of TEM from 1931 to 2021, including the replacement of glass lenses with electromagnetic lenses. It describes key components of a TEM, such as the electron gun, condenser lenses, objective lens, and detectors. It also covers topics like wave coherence, lens aberrations, chromatic aberration, specimen holders, accelerating voltage choice, and detectors. The document aims to give readers a basic understanding of TEM technology and considerations.

Uploaded by

Andy Black
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Microscope Basics

Midlands Cryo-EM Workshop


2021
Christos Savva

1931
2021
Electron Microscopy

Electromagnetic
Glass Lenses
Lenses

MicrobiologyInfo.com
Transmission Electron Microscopy
- The Transmission electron microscope is required for high-
resolution structural studies
- Requires ultra-thin specimens <0.2 μm
- 100 kV electrons λ=0.037 Å
- Lens aberrations limit resolution to ~1 Å (0.5Å in some cases)
Electron Micrograph: Picture taken with an EM

Gold particles on carbon


film. Lattice spacing of
2.04 Å

Image:
Electron Microscopy Sciences
Transmission Electron Microscopy

Electrons attracted to nucleus of atom.


The higher the atomic number (Z) the
higher the scattering.
Figures 4 and 5 Frank Krumeich
A very Basic TEM
(that probably wont work)

Gun/Filament/Cathode: Source of electrons


-300,000 V
Anode: Attracts the electrons

240 V Condenser: Focuses the electrons


Aperture
Specimen holder/loader
High Tension Generator Aperture
Objective: Creates the first image of the sample

Projector: Magnifies the first image further

~1x10-8 mbar

Camera
Vacuum Pump
The Transmission Electron Microscope
Wave Coherence

• Spatial Coherence: Are the electrons coming from the same direction and in
phase?
• Temporal coherence: Do the electrons have the same energy/speed
(wavelength)?

Coherent Waves

Incoherent Waves
TEM Gun types
Thermionic: W or LaB6 Field Emission Gun (Schottky)

100nm

Temporal 1.0-2.0 Energy Spread (eV) 0.2-0.3


>104 Source Size (nm) <30
Spatial
105 Brightness (A/cm2xsr) 108
10-3 Vacuum required (Pa) 10-8
100-300 Life Span (hrs) ~8000
Electron Beam Coherence

Thermionic gun Field Emission Gun


Gun Dependent Resolution

30 Å

Thermionic Gun

3.9 Å

Field Emission Gun

(Alice Clark, 2014)


Lenses

Image Plane

F
Object

Lens

F=Focal point
Lenses

Image:
myscope.training
Lens aberrations

Lenses are not perfect and suffer from aberrations

Perfect Lens

Spherical Aberration (Cs)

Requires expensive hardware to correct


Chromatic aberration (CC)
• Energy spread of electrons due to gun temporal coherence
• Thick samples also result in many electrons with lost energy
• Cs correctors available but expensive
• Energy filters can remove energy loss electrons
• More important for tomography of thick specimens

Chromatic Aberration of the objective lens


FFT of sample

Lens aberrations
Objective Lens Astigmatism

Astigmatic
• Lenses are not perfect and suffer from aberrations

Perfect Lens

Spherical Aberration
Astigmatism is easy to correct on modern microscopes

Corrected
Condenser Lens Astigmatism

Condenser lens: produces an image of your electron source

Check for a circular beam

Beam shape

Astigmatic Non Astigmatic


Beam on detector

www.rodenburg.org
Electron beam path through the lenses
Microscopes with 2 condenser lenses

Spot Size
Beam diameter

Diffraction plane

Image plane

Image: myscope.training
Choice of Accelerating Voltage

What kV should I use? What to consider:


- Resolution: Wavelength at 300 kV vs smaller that at 100 kV
- Aberrations: higher effect of lens aberrations higher at lower
kV
- Radiation damage: 1.5 x less dam age at 300 kV vs 100 kV
- Useful information: 25% higher elastic/inelastic ratio at 100 kV
- Detector performance: DDD perform worst at lower kV.
Detectors for lower kV scopes have reduced field of view
- Cost: 100 kV much cheaper than 200 or 300 kV
- Sample thickness: Can image thicker samples at higher kV

Peet et al. 2019 and Naydenova et al. 2020


A 100 kV FEG TEM

Tundra Cryo-TEM
Specimen Holders: Side entry
Samples kept at ~-175℃

Dubochet MKI Gatan 626: 1 grid

Gatan 910: 3 grids at once Simple Origin 200: Takes 2 autogrids


Specimen Holders: Side entry
Advantages
- Cheap (£40-80K…yes that’s cheap!!)
- Can be used on almost any side-entry TEM (Anti-contaminator required)
- Was the only option until recent years

Disadvantages
- Fiddley to use
- Fragile/easy to break
- Require pumping/heating for optimal performance (Pumping station and Heater)
- Low throughput (Sample exchange takes ~45-60min)
- Each load cycle introduces moisture to the column
- Stability not great: Drift, vibration prone
- Require manual LN2 top-up
Autoloaders

TFS Glacios 200 kV TFS Krios 300 kV JEOL Cryo-ARM 200 JEOL Cryo-ARM 300
Microscope Stage
• The stage or goniometer supports the specimen holder
• On Autoloader systems the holder is always inserted
• Moves along X, Y and Z directions and tilts along ⍺ (and does the same to
your sample)
Philips CM200 Stage Krios Stage

X Z

Y
Setting the sample to Eucentric Position
Image Plane

F=Focal point=Eucentric Focus


Objective Lens

F’
Detectors for the TEM

Detective Quantum Efficiency (DQE) =SNR2o/SNR2i


A measure of the signal to noise ratio degradation
Perfect detector has DQE of 1

Detector Advantages Drawbacks


Film - Large area - Limited to 50 exposures
- Descent DQE - Needs developing-Scanning
- Adds moisture to microscope
CCD - Easy to use - Low DQE (0.1)
- Instant
Direct electron Detectors - High DQE - Expensive
- Fast frame rates-Movies

McMullan et. al.


Ultramicroscopy, 2014
CCD vs DED

Complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS)

www.directelectron.com
Integration vs Counting
Integration
• Short exposures
• High Dose-rates
applications
• Lower DQE
Electron enters Electron signal is Charge collects in
detector. scattered. each pixel.

Counting
• Very low dose rate
(0.5-15 e-/pixel/sec)
• Fast frame rates
• Long exposures
Events reduced to • Higher DQE
www.gatan.com highest charge pixels.
DQE comparison of some detectors

Previous Generation DDD The GATAN K3 (Paul Mooney, GATAN)

McMullan et. al.


Ultramicroscopy, 2014 Nyquist: 2X the magnified pixel size
Super-resolution
Counting Counting with Super-resolution

Events reduced to Events Events


highest charge pixels. localised to sub-pixel
accuracy.

• Super-resolution with Fourier cropping “binning” increases DQE


• Increases disk space requirement
• Even allows one to go beyond physical Nyquist:
- Recent example at our facility: Data at 81K (Pixel 1.09Å). Collected at SR bin1
- Resolution reached physical Nyquist (~2.2Å)
- Re-extracted SR movies during polishing step > Reached 1.9Å
Movies instead of snapshots

• CCD and film limited to one exposure


• Fast frame rate of DED allows movie collection

Bai et. al, 2015, TBS


Movies instead of snapshots

Single Frame Summed frames


(No alignment)

Power Spectra Summed frames


Unaligned /Aligned (With alignment)

McMullan, 2016
Individual particle tracking

Particles can move in the ice


- Electrostatic attraction
- Release of stress in the ice

Scheres, 2014, Elife


Radiation Damage

• Biological samples are radiation sensitive


• Bonds are broken and free radicals released
• Imaging performed using “Low Dose” methods
• Each micrograph receives a limited amount of
electrons to prevent structure deformation
• Typically we use 40-60 electrons/Å2 per micrograph
Using movies to deal with radiation damage

“Old days” (before 2012)


Single image
1 second exposure at 40
e-/Å2/sec dose rate

Dose per image: 40 e-/Å2


Current date: New detectors
40 frames/sec, 1 second exposure at 40 e-/Å2/sec dose rate
Higher radiation damage:
Lower radiation damage: High frequencies are signal High frequencies are noise

Frame 1 2 3 4 ………………….. 40
Accumulated
Dose (e-/Å2) 1 2 3 4 ………………….. 40
Radiation damage weighting

Scheres, 2014, eLife


Microscope Apertures

• An aperture is a small hole in a strip of metal inserted in the


beam path
• Will only allow the central beam to go through

From Williams and Carter, 2009


Condenser Aperture

C2 aperture

C2 aperture Produces a more coherent, parallel beam


Objective Aperture

Specimen scattered electrons

e- e-

objective aperture

Increases Contrast
Objective Aperture

Also acts as a low-pass filter removing high-resolution


information
Consider resolution cut-off. e.g on Krios:

30 μm > 4 Å
70 μm > 1.8 Å
100 μm > 1.4 Å
Magnification and Pixel sizes
Nominal Magnification

Pixel size= Calibrated Magnification


Physical Pixel Size

Gold diffraction: 2.35Å Known atomic model fitting


Thanks and Questions

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