- Source: Scanning electron cryomicroscopy
Scanning electron cryomicroscopy (CryoSEM) is a form of electron microscopy where a hydrated but cryogenically fixed sample is imaged on a scanning electron microscope's cold stage in a cryogenic chamber. The cooling is usually achieved with liquid nitrogen. CryoSEM of biological samples with a high moisture content can be done faster with fewer sample preparation steps than conventional SEM. In addition, the dehydration processes needed to prepare a biological sample for a conventional SEM chamber create numerous distortions in the tissue leading to structural artifacts during imaging.
See also
Electron microscopy
Electron cryomicroscopy
Transmission electron cryomicroscopy
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Scanning electron cryomicroscopy
- Cryogenic electron microscopy
- Transmission electron cryomicroscopy
- Cryomicroscopy
- Cryogenic electron tomography
- Electron crystallography
- Solaris (synchrotron)
- Cryofixation
- Coronavirus
- Bacterial translation