Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10136573 | Infrared Physics & Technology | 2018 | 19 Pages |
Abstract
A Focal Plane Array FTIR microscope has successfully been coupled to the IRM beamline at the Australian Synchrotron, following the method pioneered at previous beamlines at the SRC and NSLS I synchrotrons, whereby a wide aperture of synchrotron light is split into multiple beams and spatially reconfigured to match the entrance aperture of the FTIR instrumentation. Imaging performance has been assessed using a selection of polymer and biological samples, providing diffraction-limited sub-cellular lateral resolution in the biological materials. We have demonstrated that improved collection times at high lateral resolution are possible, when compared with single element point-mapping microspectroscopy, though this is achieved with a trade off in spectral noise. Future improvements in the use of an FPA detector at the Australian Synchrotron are proposed, including removal of coherent interference and installation of a dedicated beam extraction port for FPA microspectroscopy.
Related Topics
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Authors
M.J. Tobin, J. Vongsvivut, D.E. Martin, K.H. Sizeland, M.J. Hackett, R. Takechi, N. Fimorgnari, V. Lam, J.C. Mamo, E.A. Carter, B. Swarbrick, P.A. Lay, D.A. Christensen, D. Perez-Guaita, E. Lowery, P. Heraud, B.R. Wood, L. Puskar, K.R. Bambery,