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Numerous imaging methods have been developed over recent years in order to study materials at the nanoscale. Within this context, scanning X-ray diffraction microscopy has become a routine technique, giving access to structural properties with sub-micrometre resolution. This article presents an optimized technique and an associated software package which have been implemented at the ID01 beamline (ESRF, Grenoble). A structural scanning probe microscope with intriguing imaging qualities is obtained. The technique consists in a two-dimensional quick continuous mapping with sub-micrometre resolution of a sample at a given reciprocal space position. These real space maps are made by continuously moving the sample while recording scattering images with a fast two-dimensional detector for every point along a rocking curve. Five-dimensional data sets are then produced, consisting of millions of detector images. The images are processed by the user-friendly X-ray strain orientation calculation software (XSOCS), which has been developed at ID01 for automatic analysis. It separates tilt and strain and generates two-dimensional maps of these parameters. At spatial resolutions of typically 200–800 nm, this quick imaging technique achieves strain sensitivity below Δa/a = 10−5 and a resolution of tilt variations down to 10−3° over a field of view of 100 × 100 µm.

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