1 research outputs found
Validating the Scalability of Soft X‑ray Spectromicroscopy for Quantitative Soil Ecology and Biogeochemistry Research
Synchrotron-based
soft-X-ray scanning transmission X-ray microscopy (STXM) has the potential
to provide nanoscale resolution of the associations among biological
and geological materials. However, standard methods for how samples
should be prepared, measured, and analyzed to allow the results from
these nanoscale imaging and spectroscopic tools to be scaled to field
scale biogeochemical results are not well established. We utilized
a simple sample preparation technique that allows one to assess detailed
mineral, metal, and microbe spectroscopic information at the nano-
and microscale in soil colloids. We then evaluated three common approaches
to collect and process nano- and micronscale information by STXM and
the correspondence of these approaches to millimeter scale soil measurements.
Finally, we assessed the reproducibility and spatial autocorrelation
of nano- and micronscale protein, FeÂ(II) and FeÂ(III) densities in
a soil sample. We demonstrate that linear combination fitting of entire
spectra provides slightly different FeÂ(II) mineral densities compared
to image resonance difference mapping but that difference mapping
results are highly reproducible between among sample replicates. Further,
STXM results scale to the mm scale in complex systems with an approximate
geospatial range of 3 μm in these samples