Buy article online - an online subscription or single-article purchase is required to access this article.
Download citation
Download citation
link to html
The introduction of highly intense wiggler and undulator beamlines has reintroduced the problem of X-ray radiation damage in protein crystals even at cryogenic temperatures. Several metrics for monitoring radiation damage are considered and unit-cell volume expansion is systematically investigated using crystals of three different types, but it is found to be too variable to be a useful metric. Radical scavengers of secondary radiation damage are investigated as possible mitigating agents. Styrene is found to be ineffective. A method of spectroscopically measuring the radiation damage with a microspectrophotometer was used and, in conjunction with crystallographic data, provided tentative but suggestive evidence for the efficacy of ascorbate as a free-radical scavenging agent in cryocooled hen egg-white lysozyme crystals.

Subscribe to Journal of Synchrotron Radiation

The full text of this article is available to subscribers to the journal.

If you have already registered and are using a computer listed in your registration details, please email support@iucr.org for assistance.

Buy online

You may purchase this article in PDF and/or HTML formats. For purchasers in the European Community who do not have a VAT number, VAT will be added at the local rate. Payments to the IUCr are handled by WorldPay, who will accept payment by credit card in several currencies. To purchase the article, please complete the form below (fields marked * are required), and then click on `Continue'.
E-mail address* 
Repeat e-mail address* 
(for error checking) 

Format*   PDF (US $40)
   HTML (US $40)
   PDF+HTML (US $50)
In order for VAT to be shown for your country javascript needs to be enabled.

VAT number 
(non-UK EC countries only) 
Country* 
 

Terms and conditions of use
Contact us

Follow J. Synchrotron Rad.
Sign up for e-alerts
Follow J. Synchrotron Rad. on Twitter
Follow us on facebook
Sign up for RSS feeds