scholarly journals New Approaches to Relating Structure and Function using Analytical Transmission Electron Microscopy

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert F Klie
1990 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 145-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
J W Stirling

Immuno- and affinity probes are widely used in biology and medicine, and are becoming essential tools for the elucidation of cell structure and function. This article reviews and discusses the bewildering array of probes and preparation techniques now available for the investigation of sectioned material by transmission electron microscopy, with critical analysis of their merits. Emphasis is placed on immunogold probes and methods useful for routine preparation, gathering together information that may be used to improve labeling techniques. New data on inert dehydration for the localization of sensitive epitopes without chemical or cryofixation is presented.


Author(s):  
George Guthrie ◽  
David Veblen

The nature of a geologic fluid can often be inferred from fluid-filled cavities (generally <100 μm in size) that are trapped during the growth of a mineral. A variety of techniques enables the fluids and daughter crystals (any solid precipitated from the trapped fluid) to be identified from cavities greater than a few micrometers. Many minerals, however, contain fluid inclusions smaller than a micrometer. Though inclusions this small are difficult or impossible to study by conventional techniques, they are ideally suited for study by analytical/ transmission electron microscopy (A/TEM) and electron diffraction. We have used this technique to study fluid inclusions and daughter crystals in diamond and feldspar.Inclusion-rich samples of diamond and feldspar were ion-thinned to electron transparency and examined with a Philips 420T electron microscope (120 keV) equipped with an EDAX beryllium-windowed energy dispersive spectrometer. Thin edges of the sample were perforated in areas that appeared in light microscopy to be populated densely with inclusions. In a few cases, the perforations were bound polygonal sides to which crystals (structurally and compositionally different from the host mineral) were attached (Figure 1).


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