174 5.3 X-Ray Tools
(5.9)
r
mv
qB
m r
qB
mfr
qB
f
qB
m
E
mv
q B r
m
=
=
=
∴
=
≈
=
ω
π
π
2
2
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
Thus, f is independent of v, assuming nonrelativistic effects, which is the case for cyclotrons.
Synchrotrons have larger values of r than cyclotrons and therefore greater values of E, which
can exceed 20 MeV after which noticeable relativistic effects occur; thus, f must be varied
with v to produce a stable circular beam.
A synchrotron is a large-scale infrastructure facility but produces brighter beams than x-
ray tubes, with a greater potential range of wavelength ultimately permitting greater spatial
resolution. The use of major synchrotron facilities for providing dedicated x-ray beamlines
for crystallography has increased enormously in recent years. In the two decades, since 1995,
the number of molecular structures solved using x-ray crystallography, which were deposited
each year in the Protein Data Bank archive (see Chapter 7) from nonsynchrotron x-ray crys
tallography has remained roughly constant at ~1000 structures every year, whereas those
solved using synchrotron x-ray sources has increased by a factor of ~20 over the same period.
Synchrotrons can generate a continuum of highly collimated, intense radiation from lower
energy infrared (~10−6 m wavelength) up to a much higher energy hard x-rays (10−12 m wave
length). Their output is thus described as polychromatic. The spectral output from a typical
x-ray tube is narrower at a wavelength of ~10−11 m, but both synchrotron x-ray and x-ray tube
will often propagate through a monochromator to select a much narrower range of wave
length from the continuum.
Monochromatic x-rays simplify data processing significance and improve the effective
resolution and signal-to-noise ratio of the probe beam, as well as minimize damage to
the sample from extraneous satellite lines. An x-ray monochromator typically consists of
a quartz (SiO2) crystal, often fashioned into a cylindrical geometry, which results in con
structive interference at specific angles on for a very narrow range of wavelength due to Bragg
reflection at adjacent crystal planes. For a small region of the crystal, the difference in optical
path length between the backscattered rays emerging at an angle θ from two adjacent layers,
which are separated by a spacing d of an x-ray scattering sample is 2d sin θ, and so the con
dition for constructive interference is that this difference is equal to a whole integer number
n of wavelengths λ, hence 2d sin θ = nλ. Quartz has a rhombohedral lattice with an interlayer
spacing of d = 0.425 nm; the Ka line of aluminum has a wavelength of λ = 0.834 nm; there
fore, this specific beam can be generated at an angle of θ = 78.5°. The typical bandwidth of a
monochromatic beam is ~10−12 m.
A recent source of x-rays for biophysics research has been from the x-ray free-electron
laser (XFEL). Although currently not being in sufficient mainstream use to act as a direct
alternative to synchrotron-derived x-rays, the XFEL may enable a new range of experiments
not possible with synchrotron beams. With x-ray tubes and conventional synchrotron radi
ation, the x-ray source is largely incoherent, that is, a random distribution of phases of the
output photons. However, high-energy synchrotron electrons can be made to emit coherently
TABLE 5.1 Wavelength Values of Typical Kα
Lines of Common Metal Targets
Used in the Generation of X-Rays
Element
Kαλ (nm)
Mo
0.071
Cu
0.154
Co
0.179
Fe
0.194
Cr
0.229
Al
0.834