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Biological Applications of Short Wavelength Microscopy Based on Compact, Laser-Produced Gas-Puff Plasma Source

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    0538338 - ÚJF 2021 RIV CH eng J - Journal Article
    Torrisi, Alfio - Wachulak, P. W. - Bartnik, A. - Wegrzynski, L. - Fok, T. - Fiedorowicz, H.
    Biological Applications of Short Wavelength Microscopy Based on Compact, Laser-Produced Gas-Puff Plasma Source.
    Applied Sciences-Basel. Roč. 10, č. 23 (2020), č. článku 8338. E-ISSN 2076-3417
    Institutional support: RVO:61389005
    Keywords : extreme ultraviolet * laser-matter interaction * microscopy
    OECD category: Optics (including laser optics and quantum optics)
    Impact factor: 2.679, year: 2020
    Method of publishing: Open access
    https://doi.org/10.3390/app10238338

    Short wavelength compact microscopy setups, operating in the biological-dedicated 'water window' spectral range, perform sample imaging with a nanometer spatial resolution, employing complementary tools to the existing imaging techniques.

    Over the last decades, remarkable efforts have been made to improve the resolution in photon-based microscopes. The employment of compact sources based on table-top laser-produced soft X-ray (SXR) in the 'water window' spectral range (lambda = 2.3-4.4 nm) and extreme ultraviolet (EUV) plasma allowed to overcome the limitations imposed by large facilities, such as synchrotrons and X-ray free electron lasers (XFEL), because of their high complexity, costs, and limited user access. A laser-plasma double stream gas-puff target source represents a powerful tool for microscopy operating in transmission mode, significantly improving the spatial resolution into the nanometric scale, comparing to the traditional visible light (optical) microscopes. Such an approach allows generating the plasma efficiently, without debris, providing a high flux of EUV and SXR photons. In this review, we present the development and optimization of desktop imaging systems: a EUV and an SXR full field microscope, allowing to achieve a sub-50 nm spatial resolution with short exposure time and an SXR contact microscope, capable to resolve internal structures in a thin layer of sensitive photoresist. Details about the source, as well as imaging results for biological applications, will be presented and discussed.
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0316151

     
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