Why FEG?
max.sidorov at spansion.com
max.sidorov at spansion.com
Fri Apr 23 09:43:16 PDT 2004
Some people would kill for 1 additional angstrom... :)
_____
From: Philip Koeck [mailto:Philip.Koeck at biosci.ki.se]
Sent: Friday, April 23, 2004 7:09 AM
To: 'Lucken, Uwe'; 3dem at ucsd.edu; microscopy at sparc5.microscopy.com
Cc: Sidorov, Max
Subject: RE: Why FEG?
Hi,
>From your plots it seems that you need a FEG to reach resolutions beyond about 3 A,
But I can't see any great advantage up to about 5 A resolution.
Is that correct? (and what is all the excitement about then?)
Philip
-----Original Message-----
From: Lucken, Uwe [mailto:uwl at nl.feico.com <mailto:uwl at nl.feico.com> ]
Sent: 23 April 2004 15:03
To: Philip Koeck; 3dem at ucsd.edu; microscopy at sparc5.microscopy.com
Cc: Max.Sidorov at Amd.Com
Subject: RE: Why FEG?
Dear Philip, for an FEG one can set 0.6eV energy spread and for and Lab6 one usually has 1.5eV energy spread. As you can see for -2000nm defocus and 61kx. There is a small mistake in the estimate of the convergence angle. The parallel beam conditions are C2 diameter/7 in microprobe and I have included the plots.
end
Sincerely yours,
Dr. Uwe Lücken
Senior Scientist Application Development
FEI-Electron Optics; Building AAE
Achtseweeg Noord; 5600 MD Eindhoven
The Netherlands
tel.:+31-40-2766106; fax:+31-40-2766102
mob: +31 40 2791621
-----Original Message-----
From: Philip Koeck [mailto:Philip.Koeck at biosci.ki.se <mailto:Philip.Koeck at biosci.ki.se> ]
Sent: Friday, April 23, 2004 10:44 AM
To: 3dem at ucsd.edu; microscopy at sparc5.microscopy.com
Cc: Max.Sidorov at Amd.Com; Lucken, Uwe
Subject: Why FEG?
Hi,
I've been playing around with Max Sidorow's CTFexplorer and I'm finding it hard to see the
advantage of FEG microscopes for structural biology.
At 61000-times magnification I can't see any major difference between the Tecnai 20T and
the Tecnai F20T for example.
Only at magnifications beyond 300000 is the F20T clearly superior (due to better spatial
coherence).
Am I (or is CTFexplorer) missing something relevant?
The CTFexplorer can be found at <http://clik.to/ctfexplorer> http://clik.to/ctfexplorer.
Upon request I can also send a Word file with the CTF-plots.
Philip
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