ultramicrotomy
Ultramicrotomy is a technique used to cut ultra-thin sections of material for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and related methods. The goal is to produce sections thin enough to transmit electrons while preserving fine ultrastructural details. Typical ultrathin sections are 50–100 nanometers thick; semi-thin sections used for light microscopy are generally 0.2–1 micrometer.
Specimens are usually fixed with chemical fixatives, dehydrated, and embedded in a resin such as epoxy or
Two main modes exist: room-temperature ultramicrotomy on resin-embedded specimens and cryoultramicrotomy for frozen-hydrated samples. Cryo methods
After sectioning, sections may be stained with heavy metals such as uranyl acetate and lead citrate to
Ultramicrotomy enables high-resolution imaging of cellular organelles, membranes, and complexes, and is also used in materials