Abstract

Although high resolution (2nm), low voltage (lkV), SEM of bio-organic materials can now be performed more or less routinely using instruments fitted with a field emission source, virtually no low voltage x-ray microanalysis has been carried out on this type of specimen. Boyes and Nockolds showed that quantitative microanalytical information could be obtained from polished inorganic samples at a spatial resolution of l00nm at 5kV and Johnson et al obtained similar type of data at a spatial resolution of 150nm at 3kV. High spatial resolution (l0nm) microanalysis can be achieved in frozen dried or chemically compromised sections of biological material examined at high voltage in the TEM but frozen hydrated chemically unfixed sections are damaged. The other approach is to use the SEM with frozen hydrated, chemically uncompromised samples, usually at about 10-15kV, in order to obtain sufficient signal from the elements of interest which typically lie in the range Na (Z=l 1) to Ca (Z=20).

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