Chapter 5 – Detection and Imaging Tools that Use Nonoptical Waves  173

for optical microscopy (see Chapter 3). This gives rise to Kα (transition from principal

quantum number n =​ 2–​1) and less intense Kβ (transition from principal quantum number

n =​ 3–​1) x-​ray emission lines, respectively, at a wavelength of ~10−10 m (see Table 5.1 for typ­

ical wavelengths for Kα). Other shell transitions are possible to the n =​ 2 level, or L-​shells are

designated as L x-​rays (e.g., n =​ 3 2 is Lα, n =​ 4 2 is Lβ, etc.), but in general, all but the

most intense Kα transitions are filtered out from the final emission output from an x-​ray tube

collected at right angles to the incident electron beam.

The choice of target in an x-​ray tube is a trade-​off against the x-​ray emission wavelengths

desired, the intensity of Kα emission lines, and the target metal having a sufficiently high

melting point (since ~99% of the energy from the accelerated electrons is actually converted

into heat). Melting point has no clear overall trend across the periodic table, though there is

some periodicity to melting point with the atomic number Z and all of the common target

metals used are clustered into regions of high melting point on the periodic table. In terms of

wavelength of the emission lines, this can be modeled by Moseley’s law, which predicts that

the frequency ν of emission scales closely to ~Z2:

(5.7)

v

k

Z

k

=

(

)

1

2

where k1 and k2 are constants relating to the type of electron shell transition; however, for all

Kα transitions k1 =​ k2 and the equation can be rewritten as

(5.8)

v

Z

=

×

(

)×

(

)

2 5

10

1

15

2

.

Hz

The alternative x-​ray generation mechanism to x-​ray fluorescence is that which produces

Bremsstrahlung radiation. Bremsstrahlung radiation is a continuum of electromagnetic

wave emission output across a range of wavelengths. When a charged particle is slowed

down by the effects of other nearby charged particles, some of the lost kinetic energy can be

converted into an emitted photon of Bremsstrahlung radiation. In the raw output from the

metal target in an x-​ray tube, this emission is present as a background underlying the x-​ray

fluorescence emission peaks (Figure 5.2d), though in most modern biophysical applications,

Bremsstrahlung radiation is filtered out.

Most x-​rays generated for use in biophysical research today are generated from a syn­

chrotron. The principle of generating synchrotron radiation is similar to that of a cyclo­

tron; in that, it involves accelerating charged particles using radiofrequency voltages and

multiple electromagnet B-​field deflectors to generate circular motion, here of an electron

(Figure 5.2e). These bending magnet deflectors alter the path of electrons in the storage ring.

The theory of synchrotron radiation is nontrivial but is confirmed both in classical physics

and at the quantum mechanical levels. In essence, a curved trajectory of a charged particle

results in warping of the shape of the electric dipole force field to produce a strongly for­

ward peaked distribution of electromagnetic radiation, which is highly collimated; this is

synchrotron radiation.

However, synchrotrons use radiofrequency (f) values that, unlike cyclotrons, are not

fixed and also operate over much larger diameters than the few tens of meters of a cyclo­

tron, more typically a few hundred meters. The United States has several large synchro­

tron facilities including the National Synchrotron Light Source at Brookhaven, with the

United Kingdom also investing substantial funds in the DIAMOND synchrotron national

facility, with 100 other synchrotron facilities around the world, at the time of writing.

Note the largest particle accelerator as such, though not explicitly designed as a synchro­

tron source of x-​rays, is 27 km in diameter, which is the Large Hadron Collider near

Geneva, Switzerland.

Equating magnetic and centripetal forces on an electron of mass m and charge q, traveling

at speed v with kinetic energy E in a circular orbit of radius r implies simply