The analytical system depends on collecting the x-ray photons that are generated within the sample as a consequence of interaction with the same high energy beam of primary electrons used to produce images.
Patrick Echlin was a lecturer in the Department of Plant Sciences and Director of the Multi-Imaging Centre, School of Biological Science, University of Cambridge until he retired in 1999. He has taught for more than thirty years at the Lehigh University Microscopy School and is the author and co-auther of eight books on scanning electron microscopy and x-ray microanalysis. He is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Microscopical Society and received the Distinguished Scientist Award in Biological Sciences from the Microscope Society of America in 2001.
Recensioner i media
This handbook should find its way to the reference bookshelf of all imaging laboratories. It should also become required reading for anyone being trained for SEM work, or anyone who might need to have their samples examined by using such techniques. In that way, it will be less likely that deficient results will be published and that the full potential of the SEM be realized. -- Iolo ap Gwynn, Microscopy and Microanalysis (2010)
Innehållsförteckning
Sample Collection and Selection.- Sample Preparation Tools.- Sample Support.- Sample Embedding ?and Mounting.- Sample Exposure.- Sample Dehydration.- Sample Stabilization for Imaging in the SEM.- Sample Stabilization to Preserve Chemical Identity.- Sample Cleaning.- Sample Surface Charge Elimination.- Sample Artifacts and Damage.- Additional Sources of Information.
Charles E. Lyman, Dale E. Newbury, Joseph Goldstein, David B. Williams, Alton D. Romig Jr., John Armstrong, Patrick Echlin, Charles Fiori, David C. Joy, Eric Lifshin, Klaus-Rüdiger Peters
Charles E. Lyman, Dale E. Newbury, Joseph Goldstein, David B. Williams, Alton D. Romig Jr., John Armstrong, Patrick Echlin, Charles Fiori, David C. Joy, Eric Lifshin, Klaus-Rüdiger Peters