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December 2023 ESRFnews
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DARK-FIELD X-RAY MICROSCOPY
J E F F W A D E
I
TS HARD to build a career out of instrumentation
Those who try says Hugh Simons at the Technical
University of Denmark DTU near Copenhagen
usually share the same fate as football midfielders for
ever passing the ball to the strikers but never getting
any credit for goals scored But for Simons and his col
leagues this has not been the case Known as darkfield
Xray microscopy DFXM their pioneering technique
has already been recognised by three prestigious grants
from the European Research Council ERC and is
now remarkably the subject of a fourth It has also been
supported for well over a decade by the ESRF, both with
long-term access and the investment in a flagship EBS
beamline at the ID03 port. “Only now is the technique
taking flight,” says Simons. “But for all that time, more
than 10 years, we’ve had the trust of the ESRF manage-
ment. They’ve really believed in the project.”
DFXM piques everyone’s interest because it can
shed light on materials that are common and yet very
difficult to study: those with crystalline structures that
are hierarchically organised over several length scales.
Biominerals, ice, sand and most geological materials fit
into this category, not to mention most technological
materials, such as metals, ceramics and semiconductors.
Scientists are very keen to understand how structural
changes that occur on nanometre scales in these
materials can ripple out into greater structures at the
millimetre scale and beyond – but in one way or another,
existing instrumentation has fallen short. Electron
techniques are limited to thin foils or involve serial,
destructive sectioning, while classical non-destructive
X-ray diffraction techniques are usually limited to small
sample volumes. Worse, all methods struggle with the
cacophony of overlapping signals coming from millions
of individual structural elements at once.
DFXM does not. In essence, it is a mix of two long-
existing techniques: X-ray microscopy and X-ray
diffraction. In DFXM , specialised X-ray lenses for high-
energy X-rays are placed both before and after a sample.
The lens placed after collects a beam of Braggdiffracted
Xrays from a crystalline grain deeply inside the sample
and generates a magnified 2D image of it Afterwards
3D images can be generated by tomographic methods
or by illuminating one layer in the sample at a time and
stacking the resulting 2D maps By varying goniometer
tilts DFXM can generate highresolution 3D maps of
the structure within bulk samples see fig 1 overleaf
The ESRFs Carsten Detlefs then beamline scientist
at ID06 was the first to try the idea back in 2010
His results caught the eye of Henning Friis Poulsen a
physicist at the DTU who had previously pioneered
another technique 3D Xray diffraction 3DXRD
Far left: In the early 2010s, Simons was one of several who worked
hard to establish DFXM at the ID06 beamline, with painstaking
beam alignment. Left: Today, with benefit of an ERC grant, Yıldırım
continues their pioneering work in the development of “pink
beam” DFXM, for much faster data collection.
“DFXM can generate a high-resolution
3D map of all a sample’s grains”