- Lo, Yuan Hung;
- Liao, Chen-Ting;
- Zhou, Jihan;
- Rana, Arjun;
- Bevis, Charles S;
- Gui, Guan;
- Enders, Bjoern;
- Cannon, Kevin M;
- Yu, Young-Sang;
- Celestre, Richard;
- Nowrouzi, Kasra;
- Shapiro, David;
- Kapteyn, Henry;
- Falcone, Roger;
- Bennett, Chris;
- Murnane, Margaret;
- Miao, Jianwei
Multimodal microscopy that combines complementary nanoscale imaging techniques is critical for extracting comprehensive chemical, structural, and functional information, particularly for heterogeneous samples. X-ray microscopy can achieve high-resolution imaging of bulk materials with chemical, magnetic, electronic, and bond orientation contrast, while electron microscopy provides atomic-scale spatial resolution with quantitative elemental composition. Here, we combine x-ray ptychography and scanning transmission x-ray spectromicroscopy with three-dimensional energy-dispersive spectroscopy and electron tomography to perform structural and chemical mapping of an Allende meteorite particle with 15-nm spatial resolution. We use textural and quantitative elemental information to infer the mineral composition and discuss potential processes that occurred before or after accretion. We anticipate that correlative x-ray and electron microscopy overcome the limitations of individual imaging modalities and open up a route to future multiscale nondestructive microscopies of complex functional materials and biological systems.