2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.ultramic.2006.04.007
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Transmission electron microtomography without the “missing wedge” for quantitative structural analysis

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Cited by 210 publications
(153 citation statements)
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“…It should be mentioned that the present result may contain approximately 12% of error in z-direction parallel to optical axis due to the missing wedge, which is introduced by a limited maximum tilt angle. 12) Here, also note that a characteristic triangular shape can be seen at the edge of an LPSO band as marked by a circle. Although the detailed growth mechanism of the LPSO is not clear, it is presumed that such irregular or characteristic shapes are related to the lateral growth mechanism of the LPSO.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…It should be mentioned that the present result may contain approximately 12% of error in z-direction parallel to optical axis due to the missing wedge, which is introduced by a limited maximum tilt angle. 12) Here, also note that a characteristic triangular shape can be seen at the edge of an LPSO band as marked by a circle. Although the detailed growth mechanism of the LPSO is not clear, it is presumed that such irregular or characteristic shapes are related to the lateral growth mechanism of the LPSO.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…As mentioned earlier, this is caused by reconstructing from a limited angular range (the maximum possible is 180°) and occurs for several reasons-the sample holder may obstruct the field of view at high tilt angles; the microscope's goniometer may not be able to tilt through the full −90°-+90°range, or the sample is in the form of a plane (as opposed to an isolated particle or a fabricated cylindrical pillar [26]) and images taken at high tilt angles have too high an effective sample thickness for good quality imaging. Unless tilt series are taken of pillar samples or individual particles and using a sample holder which allows full rotation without obstructions, there will always be a missing wedge of information for which to account.…”
Section: Missing Wedgementioning
confidence: 99%
“…More tilts and a larger tilt range adds information and results in a higher quality reconstruction. Specimens with a needle shape geometry may permit the full 180° tilt rage 14 . However, practical limitations, such as the sample or stage geometry, often prevent full specimen rotation in the microscope-±70° is a common upper limit.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%