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Transmission Electron Microscopy

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TLDR
The client would like to get a larger, approximately 3 cm in diameter, well fixed tissue sample, together with a detailed report of the clinical presentation, gross, and microscopic lesions, along with the submission of samples prepared in a similar manner by the client for processing.
Abstract
We wrote it to be read by, and taught to, senior undergraduates and starting graduate students, rather than studied in a research laboratory. We wrote it using the same style and sentence construction that we have used in countless classroom lectures, rather than how we have written our countless (and much-less read) formal scientificpapers. In this respect particularly, wehave been deliberate in notreferencing the sources of every experimental fact or theoretical concept (although we do include some hints and clues in the chapters). However, at the end of each chapter we have included groups of references that should lead you to the best sources in the literature and help you go into more depth as you become more confident about what you are looking for. We are great believers in the value of history as the basis for under- standing the present and so the history of the techniques and key historical references are threaded throughout the book. Just because a reference is dated in the previous century (or even the antepenultimate century) doesn’t mean it isn’t useful! Likewise, with the numerous figures drawn from across the fields of materials science and engineering and nanotechnology, we do not reference the source in each caption. But at the very end of the book each of our many generous colleagues whose work we have used is clearly acknowledged.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical and physical interactions at metal/self-assembled organic monolayer interfaces

TL;DR: The M/SAM approach to interface research is delineated as a new subfield in surface science in the context of other approaches to inorganic/organic interface research in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of disconnections in phase transformations

TL;DR: In this article, the topological model of phase transformations is described in terms of disconnections, and a variety of phase transformation with accompanying plastic strain is shown, together with elastic strains associated with equilibrium arrays of interface defects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surface plasmon modes of a single silver nanorod: an electron energy loss study.

TL;DR: An electron energy loss study using energy filtered TEM of spatially resolved surface plasmon excitations on a silver nanorod of aspect ratio 14.2 resting on a 30 nm thick silicon nitride membrane shows that the excitation is quantized as resonant modes whose intensity maxima vary along the Nanorod's length and whose wavelength becomes compressed towards the ends of the nan orod.
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Nanometer-resolution electron microscopy through micrometers-thick water layers.

TL;DR: Applications of STEM imaging in liquid can be found in cell biology, e.g., to study tagged proteins in whole eukaryotic cells in liquid and in materials science to study the interaction of solid:liquid interfaces at the nanoscale.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Diffraction contrast from spherically symmetrical coherency strains

TL;DR: In this article, the properties of images formed by diffraction contrast in thin metal foils viewed by transmission electron microscopy are studied by means of the dynamical theory of diffraction, including absorption.
Journal ArticleDOI

XXXV. A tentative theory of light quanta

TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown mathematically that the Lorentz-Einstein transference of light quanta is a non-trivial process. But it is assumed that the light is essentially made up of light Quanta, all having the same extraordinarily small mass.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electron Microscope and Diffraction Study of Metal Crystal Textures by Means of Thin Sections

TL;DR: In this article, an electrolytic method for preparing thin metal sections for electron microscopy and diffraction is introduced and its application to the structure of cold-worked aluminum and an aluminum-copper alloy is demonstrated.