Publication | Closed Access
Detection of Single Atoms and Buried Defects in Three Dimensions by Aberration-Corrected Electron Microscope with 0.5-Å Information Limit
301
Citations
26
References
2008
Year
EngineeringMicroscopyThree DimensionsElectron DiffractionElectron MicroscopyMicroscopy MethodInstrumentationLens AberrationsBiophysicsAberration-corrected Electron MicroscopePhysicsCrystalline DefectsNanotechnologyAtomic PhysicsMicroanalysisSuper-resolutionElectron MicroscopesSpectroscopyScanning Probe MicroscopyApplied PhysicsBuried DefectsElectron MicroscopeMedicine
The ability of electron microscopes to analyze all the atoms in individual nanostructures is limited by lens aberrations. However, recent advances in aberration-correcting electron optics have led to greatly enhanced instrument performance and new techniques of electron microscopy. The development of an ultrastable electron microscope with aberration-correcting optics and a monochromated high-brightness source has significantly improved instrument resolution and contrast. In the present work, we report information transfer beyond 50 pm and show images of single gold atoms with a signal-to-noise ratio as large as 10. The instrument's new capabilities were exploited to detect a buried Sigma3 {112} grain boundary and observe the dynamic arrangements of single atoms and atom pairs with sub-angstrom resolution. These results mark an important step toward meeting the challenge of determining the three-dimensional atomic-scale structure of nanomaterials.
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