Spectromicroscopy using Ptychography

Ptychography is a form of scanning diffractive imaging that can successfully retrieve the modulus and phase of both the sample transmission function and the illuminating probe. An experimental difficulty commonly encountered in diffractive imaging is the large dynamic range of the diffraction data.

A. M. Maiden et al.Nature Communications 4, 1669 (2013).



In our work we report a novel ptychographic experiment using a randomly phased X-ray probe to considerably reduce the dynamic range of the recorded diffraction patterns. Images can be reconstructed reliably and robustly from this setup, even when scatter from the specimen is weak. A series of ptychographic reconstructions at X-ray energies around the L absorption edge of iron demonstrates the advantages of this method for soft X-ray 
spectromicroscopy, which can readily provide chemical sensitivity without the need for optical refocusing. In particular, the phase signal is in perfect registration with 

the modulus signal and provides complementary information that can be more sensitive to changes in the local chemical environment.

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Soft X-ray spectromicroscopy using ptychography with randomly phased illumination
A. M. Maiden, G. R. Morrison, B. Kaulich, A. Gianoncelli, J. Rodenburg, Nature Communications 4, 1669 (2013)
doi:10.1038/ncomms2640.

Last Updated on Thursday, 06 February 2014 11:24