Application Challenges
Synchrotron radiation sources cover a broad spectral range from infrared to hard X-rays, serving as essential tools for structural analysis and materials science. In the visible and hard X-ray bands, imaging can be performed through windows in ambient air. However, for vacuum ultraviolet and soft X-rays, direct detection in vacuum is required. Cameras must therefore provide broadband spectral response, ultra-high resolution, and large-format imaging capability, while ensuring stability during high-throughput and long-duration operation.


Dhyana XF95 / XV95
Soft X-Ray & EUV sCMOS Cameras
The Dhyana XF95 / XV95, developed by TUCsen, are specialized sCMOS cameras designed for soft X-ray (SXR) and extreme ultraviolet (EUV) imaging, both ex-situ and in-situ. They achieve near-100% quantum efficiency within the photon energy range of 80–1000 eV, with overall QE exceeding 90% across the full range, and approaching 100% in certain bands.
The cameras support a full-resolution mode (2048 × 2048) with a frame rate of 24 fps, several tens of times faster than conventional BSI CCDs. They are fully capable of replacing BSI CCDs for soft X-ray multilayer imaging, enabling applications in previously limited research fields.