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New EU project 'ONEM' develops a unique hybrid imaging technique

04.03.2021

The ONEM project will develop a new non-invasive microscopy technique for imaging dynamic processes at interfaces, called Optical Near-field Electron Microscopy. Led by physicist Thomas Juffmann from the University of Vienna, ONEM – which has a budget of 3,7 million Euro – is one of only two proposals that succeeded in the topic "Measuring the Unmeasurable" of the call from the European Innovation Council. It starts in March.

The project is conducted by research groups from Leiden University, J. Heyrovský Institute of Physical Chemistry of the Czech Academy of Sciences, and the University of Vienna.
"Imaging the dynamics at interfaces is of great importance throughout science and technology. ONEM aspires to build a microscope that can image these dynamics on the nanoscale without damaging the specimen," says Thomas Juffmann. "It will extend the toolbox of biologists and material scientists and will give new insights into processes like corrosion, battery charging, or protein aggregation in lipid bilayers," he continues.
The ONEM project aims to establish a worldwide unique imaging technology in Europe: optical near-field electron microscopy. The new hybrid imaging technique will be complementary to the state-of-art techniques currently in use to provide nanoscale imaging, such as super-resolution microscopy, atomic force microscopy or cryo-electron microscopy.

"We envisage a technique that combines the non-invasiveness of probing with light with the spatial resolution offered by electron optics," explains Sense Jan van der Molen from Leiden University. "The technique can be realized by combining low energy electron microscopy, ultrathin high efficiency photocathodes, and liquid cell technology," he adds.

The team will build the first ONEM prototype and demonstrate the new technique in proof-of-principle studies in plasmonics, electrochemistry, and molecular biology. "We would love to watch the dynamics of proteins within lipid bilayers. If ONEM allows us to do so at high resolution and over extended periods, then this would open doors to many investigations in molecular cell biology such as following the formation of functional supramolecular protein complexes of relevance in pathology of disease," says Mariana Amaro  (the J. Heyrovský Institute of Physical Chemistry).

In order to facilitate rapid commercialization of Optical Near-field Electron Microscopy, ONEM will collaborate closely with industrial partners (SPECS GmbH, RND Inc.). The collaboration just had its kick-off event, and is taking first steps towards realizing this new concept for damage-free nanoscale imaging.

Background information:
project website

FET-Open and FET Proactive are now part of the Enhanced European Innovation Council (EIC) Pilot (specifically the Pathfinder), the new home for deep-tech research and innovation in Horizon 2020, the EU funding programme for research and innovation.

Current research on the topic: https://arxiv.org/abs/2102.13010

Scientific contacts

Dr. Thomas Juffmann
Quantum Optics, Quantum Nanophysics and Quantum Information
University of Vienna
1090 - Wien, Boltzmanngasse 5
+43-1-4277-725 20
thomas.juffmann@univie.ac.at

Press contact

Pia Gärtner, MA
Press and Information Office of the University of Vienna
University of Vienna
1010 - Vienna, Universitätsring 1
T+43-1-4277-17541
pia.gaertner@univie.ac.at