Yong S. Chu
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Yong S. Chu.
Journal of Physics D | 2014
Hanfei Yan; Ray Conley; Nathalie Bouet; Yong S. Chu
Multilayer Laue lens (MLL) is a new class of x-ray optics that offer great promise for achieving nanometre-level spatial resolution by focusing hard x-rays. Fabricating an MLL via thin-film deposition provides the means to achieve a linear Fresnel-zone plate structure with zone widths below 1?nm, while retaining a virtually limitless aspect ratio. Despite its similarity to the Fresnel-zone plate, MLL exhibits categorically distinctive focusing properties and their fabrication comes with a wide array of challenges. This article provides a comprehensive review of advances in MLLs, and includes extensive theoretical modelling on focusing performance, discussion on fabrication challenges, their current capabilities and notable results from x-ray focusing experiments.
Optics Express | 2011
Hanfei Yan; Volker Rose; Deming Shu; Enju Lima; Hyon Chol Kang; Ray Conley; Chian Liu; Nima Jahedi; Albert T. Macrander; G. Brian Stephenson; Martin Holt; Yong S. Chu; Ming Lu; J. Maser
Hard x-ray microscopy with nanometer resolution will open frontiers in the study of materials and devices, environmental sciences, and life sciences by utilizing the unique characterization capabilities of x-rays. Here we report two-dimensional nanofocusing by multilayer Laue lenses (MLLs), a type of diffractive optics that is in principle capable of focusing x-rays to 1 nm. We demonstrate focusing to a 25 × 27 nm(2) FWHM spot with an efficiency of 2% at a photon energy of 12 keV, and to a 25 × 40 nm(2) FWHM spot with an efficiency of 17% at a photon energy of 19.5 keV.
Scientific Reports | 2013
Xiaojing Huang; Hanfei Yan; Evgeny Nazaretski; Raymond Conley; Nathalie Bouet; Juan Zhou; Kenneth Lauer; Li Li; Daejin Eom; D. Legnini; Ross Harder; Ian K. Robinson; Yong S. Chu
The focusing performance of a multilayer Laue lens (MLL) with 43.4 μm aperture, 4 nm finest zone width and 4.2 mm focal length at 12 keV was characterized with X-rays using ptychography method. The reconstructed probe shows a full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM) peak size of 11.2 nm. The obtained X-ray wavefront shows excellent agreement with the dynamical calculations, exhibiting aberrations less than 0.3 wave period, which ensures the MLL capable of producing a diffraction-limited focus while offering a sufficient working distance. This achievement opens up opportunities of incorporating a variety of in-situ experiments into ultra high-resolution X-ray microscopy studies.
Optics Express | 2011
Tsung-Yu Chen; Yu-Tung Chen; Cheng-Liang Wang; Ivan M. Kempson; Wah-Keat Lee; Yong S. Chu; Y. Hwu; G. Margaritondo
Fresnel zone plates (450 nm thick Au, 25 nm outermost zone width) used as objective lenses in a full field transmission reached a spatial resolution better than 20 nm and 1.5% efficiency with 8 keV photons. Zernike phase contrast was also realized without compromising the resolution. These are very significant achievements in the rapid progress of high-aspect-ratio zone plate fabrication by combined electron beam lithography and electrodeposition.
Journal of Nanobiotechnology | 2012
Chia-Chi Chien; Hsiang-Hsin Chen; Sheng-Feng Lai; Kang-Chao Wu; Xiaoqing Cai; Y. Hwu; Cyril Petibois; Yong S. Chu; G. Margaritondo
BackgroundAngiogenesis is widely investigated in conjunction with cancer development, in particular because of the possibility of early stage detection and of new therapeutic strategies. However, such studies are negatively affected by the limitations of imaging techniques in the detection of microscopic blood vessels (diameter 3-5 μm) grown under angiogenic stress. We report that synchrotron-based X-ray imaging techniques with very high spatial resolution can overcome this obstacle, provided that suitable contrast agents are used.ResultsWe tested different contrast agents based on gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) for the detection of cancer-related angiogenesis by synchrotron microradiology, microtomography and high resolution X-ray microscopy. Among them only bare-AuNPs in conjunction with heparin injection provided sufficient contrast to allow in vivo detection of small capillary species (the smallest measured lumen diameters were 3-5 μm). The detected vessel density was 3-7 times higher than with other nanoparticles. We also found that bare-AuNPs with heparin allows detecting symptoms of local extravascular nanoparticle diffusion in tumor areas where capillary leakage appeared.ConclusionsAlthough high-Z AuNPs are natural candidates as radiology contrast agents, their success is not guaranteed, in particular when targeting very small blood vessels in tumor-related angiography. We found that AuNPs injected with heparin produced the contrast level needed to reveal--for the first time by X-ray imaging--tumor microvessels with 3-5 μm diameter as well as extravascular diffusion due to basal membrane defenestration. These results open the interesting possibility of functional imaging of the tumor microvasculature, of its development and organization, as well as of the effects of anti-angiogenic drugs.
Applied Physics Letters | 2011
George J. Nelson; William M. Harris; John R. Izzo; Kyle N. Grew; Wilson K. S. Chiu; Yong S. Chu; Jaemock Yi; Joy C. Andrews; Yijin Liu; P. Pianetta
The reduction-oxidation cycling of the nickel-based oxides in composite solid oxide fuel cells and battery electrodes is directly related to cell performance. A greater understanding of nickel redox mechanisms at the microstructural level can be achieved in part using transmission x-ray microscopy (TXM) to explore material oxidation states. X-ray nanotomography combined with x-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy has been applied to study samples containing distinct regions of nickel and nickel oxide (NiO) compositions. Digitally processed images obtained using TXM demonstrate the three-dimensional chemical mapping and microstructural distribution capabilities of full-field XANES nanotomography.
Journal of Nanobiotechnology | 2011
Hsiang-Hsin Chen; Chia-Chi Chien; Cyril Petibois; Cheng-Liang Wang; Yong S. Chu; Sheng-Feng Lai; Tzu-En Hua; Yi-Yun Chen; Xiaoqing Cai; Ivan M. Kempson; Y. Hwu; G. Margaritondo
BackgroundQuantitative analysis of nanoparticle uptake at the cellular level is critical to nanomedicine procedures. In particular, it is required for a realistic evaluation of their effects. Unfortunately, quantitative measurements of nanoparticle uptake still pose a formidable technical challenge. We present here a method to tackle this problem and analyze the number of metal nanoparticles present in different types of cells. The method relies on high-lateral-resolution (better than 30 nm) transmission x-ray microimages with both absorption contrast and phase contrast -- including two-dimensional (2D) projection images and three-dimensional (3D) tomographic reconstructions that directly show the nanoparticles.ResultsPractical tests were successfully conducted on bare and polyethylene glycol (PEG) coated gold nanoparticles obtained by x-ray irradiation. Using two different cell lines, EMT and HeLa, we obtained the number of nanoparticle clusters uptaken by each cell and the cluster size. Furthermore, the analysis revealed interesting differences between 2D and 3D cultured cells as well as between 2D and 3D data for the same 3D specimen.ConclusionsWe demonstrated the feasibility and effectiveness of our method, proving that it is accurate enough to measure the nanoparticle uptake differences between cells as well as the sizes of the formed nanoparticle clusters. The differences between 2D and 3D cultures and 2D and 3D images stress the importance of the 3D analysis which is made possible by our approach.
Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015
Evgeny Nazaretski; Kenneth Lauer; Hanfei Yan; Nathalie Bouet; Juan Zhou; Raymond Conley; Xian-Rong Huang; Weihe Xu; M. Lu; K. Gofron; Sebastian Kalbfleisch; Ulrich H. Wagner; Christoph Rau; Yong S. Chu
Hard X-ray microscopy is a prominent tool suitable for nanoscale-resolution non-destructive imaging of various materials used in different areas of science and technology. With an ongoing effort to push the 2D/3D imaging resolution down to 10 nm in the hard X-ray regime, both the fabrication of nano-focusing optics and the stability of the microscope using those optics become extremely challenging. In this work a microscopy system designed and constructed to accommodate multilayer Laue lenses as nanofocusing optics is presented. The developed apparatus has been thoroughly characterized in terms of resolution and stability followed by imaging experiments at a synchrotron facility. Drift rates of ∼2 nm h(-1) accompanied by 13 nm × 33 nm imaging resolution at 11.8 keV are reported.
Optics Express | 2014
Xiaojing Huang; Hanfei Yan; Ross Harder; Y. Hwu; Ian K. Robinson; Yong S. Chu
We demonstrate the advantages of imaging with ptychography scans that follow a Fermat spiral trajectory. This scan pattern provides a more uniform coverage and a higher overlap ratio with the same number of scan points over the same area than the presently used mesh and concentric [13] patterns. Under realistically imperfect measurement conditions, numerical simulations show that the quality of the reconstructed image is improved significantly with a Fermat spiral compared with a concentric scan pattern. The result is confirmed by the performance enhancement with experimental data, especially under low-overlap conditions. These results suggest that the Fermat spiral pattern increases the quality of the reconstructed image and tolerance to data with imperfections.
Scientific Reports | 2013
Hanfei Yan; Yong S. Chu; J. Maser; Evgeny Nazaretski; Jungdae Kim; Hyon Chol Kang; Jeffrey J. Lombardo; Wilson K. S. Chiu
For scanning x-ray microscopy, many attempts have been made to image the phase contrast based on a concept of the beam being deflected by a specimen, the so-called differential phase contrast imaging (DPC). Despite the successful demonstration in a number of representative cases at moderate spatial resolutions, these methods suffer from various limitations that preclude applications of DPC for ultra-high spatial resolution imaging, where the emerging wave field from the focusing optic tends to be significantly more complicated. In this work, we propose a highly robust and generic approach based on a Fourier-shift fitting process and demonstrate quantitative phase imaging of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) anode by multilayer Laue lenses (MLLs). The high sensitivity of the phase to structural and compositional variations makes our technique extremely powerful in correlating the electrode performance with its buried nanoscale interfacial structures that may be invisible to the absorption and fluorescence contrasts.