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Oxford Instruments Andor iXon 888 EMCCD Camera

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Brand Oxford Instruments
Origin United Kingdom
Model iXon 888
Pixel Size 13 µm
Sensor Type Back-Illuminated Electron-Multiplying CCD
Quantum Efficiency >95% (peak)
Cooling Thermoelectric (−80 °C typical operating temperature)
Readout Modes EMCCD and conventional CCD
Frame Rate Up to 30 fps at full resolution (configurable via ROI and binning)
Interface USB 3.0

Overview

The Oxford Instruments Andor iXon 888 is a high-performance, back-illuminated electron-multiplying charge-coupled device (EMCCD) camera engineered for quantitative low-light scientific imaging. Operating on the principle of impact ionization within a specialized multiplication register, the iXon 888 achieves effective single-photon detection sensitivity without compromising temporal resolution or spatial fidelity. Unlike conventional CCDs or even modern sCMOS sensors—whose read noise limits detection in ultra-low-signal regimes—the iXon 888’s electron multiplication gain (EM gain) amplifies photoelectrons prior to readout, effectively rendering read noise negligible across all practical readout speeds. This architecture enables photon-starved experiments—such as single-molecule fluorescence localization microscopy (SMLM), live-cell total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF), or time-resolved luminescence spectroscopy—to maintain high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and statistical integrity, even at sub-millisecond exposure times.

Key Features

  • Back-illuminated sensor architecture delivering >95% peak quantum efficiency (QE) in the visible to near-UV range (300–700 nm), maximizing photon capture efficiency.
  • Integrated thermoelectric cooling to −80 °C (typical), reducing dark current to <0.001 e⁻/pixel/sec—critical for long-exposure applications requiring minimal thermal noise.
  • Dual-readout capability: seamless switching between high-gain EMCCD mode for photon-limited imaging and conventional CCD mode for high-dynamic-range, low-noise intensity quantification.
  • USB 3.0 interface enabling high-bandwidth data transfer and deterministic frame timing—essential for synchronization with pulsed lasers, galvo scanners, or electrophysiology rigs.
  • Hardware-based EM gain calibration and real-time gain monitoring ensure traceable, reproducible amplification across experimental sessions.
  • On-chip overscan region and correlated double sampling (CDS) minimize fixed-pattern noise and reset noise, supporting quantitative pixel-level analysis compliant with GLP/GMP workflows.

Sample Compatibility & Compliance

The iXon 888 is compatible with standard C-mount and F-mount optical interfaces, facilitating integration into inverted and upright microscopes, spectrographs, and custom optical benches. Its compact form factor and low power consumption support benchtop and enclosed-system deployments. From a regulatory standpoint, the camera’s firmware supports audit-trail-enabled acquisition logs, metadata embedding (including exposure time, gain setting, temperature, and timestamp), and export formats compliant with FAIR data principles (e.g., TIFF with embedded OME-XML). While not certified as a medical device, its performance characteristics meet common requirements for ISO/IEC 17025-accredited laboratories conducting fluorescence-based assays, and its acquisition software (Andor Solis) offers optional 21 CFR Part 11 compliance modules—including electronic signatures, user access controls, and immutable acquisition records—for regulated environments.

Software & Data Management

The iXon 888 is fully supported by Andor’s Solis software suite, a modular, scriptable platform designed for both interactive operation and automated experiment control. Solis provides real-time image processing (background subtraction, flat-field correction, drift correction), multi-channel time-series registration, and direct export to HDF5, NRRD, or OME-TIFF—formats widely adopted in open-source bioimage analysis pipelines (e.g., Python-based Napari, Fiji/ImageJ, or MATLAB). Advanced users may leverage the Andor SDK (C++, Python, LabVIEW) to integrate the camera into custom acquisition frameworks, including those implementing SRRF-Stream super-resolution reconstruction or real-time adaptive illumination control. All acquired datasets retain embedded calibration metadata, ensuring traceability from raw photon count to final publication-ready figure.

Applications

  • Single-molecule tracking and localization microscopy (PALM, STORM, DNA-PAINT)
  • Live-cell TIRF and spinning-disk confocal imaging under physiological conditions
  • Ultrafast luminescence decay measurements in materials science and photophysics
  • Low-light Raman spectroscopy and resonance-enhanced Raman imaging
  • Quantitative Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) and fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) with time-gated acquisition
  • Neuroimaging of calcium dynamics in primary neuronal cultures using GCaMP variants

FAQ

What is the difference between EMCCD and sCMOS for low-light imaging?
EMCCD provides deterministic, analog gain before readout, eliminating read noise floor dependence on frame rate—making it superior for photon counting at very low flux (<1 photon/pixel/frame). sCMOS excels in speed and field-of-view but retains ~1–2 e⁻ RMS read noise, limiting its single-photon discrimination capability.
Can the iXon 888 be used for quantitative intensity measurements?
Yes—when operated in conventional CCD mode with calibrated EM gain = 1×, the sensor delivers linear response over >4 orders of magnitude (typically 0–65,535 ADU), with pixel-wise gain and offset correction enabled via Solis.
Is hardware triggering supported?
Yes—the iXon 888 features TTL-compatible input/output triggers for precise synchronization with external devices such as lasers, shutters, or stage controllers.
Does the camera support binning?
Yes—both on-chip hardware binning (2×2, 3×3, etc.) and software binning are available, enabling trade-offs between sensitivity, resolution, and frame rate.
What cooling performance is achievable without liquid nitrogen?
Thermoelectric cooling reaches −80 °C under ambient conditions (25 °C), sufficient to suppress dark current to <0.001 e⁻/pixel/sec—eliminating the need for cryogenic infrastructure in most life science labs.

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