Abstract
The Infrared Microspectroscopy Beamline at the Australian Synchrotron is equipped with a Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer, which is coupled with an infrared (IR) microscope and a choice of two detectors: a single-point narrow-band mercury cadmium telluride (MCT) detector and a 64 × 64 multi-pixel focal plane array (FPA) imaging detector. A scanning-based point-by-point mapping method is commonly used with a tightly focused synchrotron IR beam at the sample plane, using an MCT detector and a matching 36× IR reflecting objective and condenser (NA = 0.5), which is time consuming. In this study, the beam size at the sample plane was increased using a 15× objective and the spatio-spectral aberrations were investigated. A correlation-based semi-synthetic computational optical approach was applied to assess the possibilities of exploiting the aberrations to perform rapid imaging rather than a mapping approach.
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CITATION STYLE
Anand, V., Ng, S. H., Katkus, T., Maksimovic, J., Klein, A. R., Vongsvivut, J., … Juodkazis, S. (2021). Exploiting spatio-spectral aberrations for rapid synchrotron infrared imaging. In Journal of Synchrotron Radiation (Vol. 28, pp. 1616–1619). International Union of Crystallography. https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600577521007104
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