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Title: Atomic-Resolution 3D Electron Microscopy with Dynamic Diffraction

Conference ·
OSTI ID:842049

Achievement of atomic-resolution electron-beam tomography will allow determination of the three-dimensional structure of nanoparticles (and other suitable specimens) at atomic resolution. Three-dimensional reconstructions will yield ''section'' images that resolve atoms overlapped in normal electron microscope images (projections), resolving lighter atoms such as oxygen in the presence of heavier atoms, and atoms that lie on non-lattice sites such as those in non-periodic defect structures. Lower-resolution electron microscope tomography has been used to produce reconstructed 3D images of nanoparticles [1] but extension to atomic resolution is considered not to be straightforward. Accurate three-dimensional reconstruction from two-dimensional projections generally requires that intensity in the series of 2-D images be a monotonic function of the specimen structure (often specimen density, but in our case atomic potential). This condition is not satisfied in electron microscopy when specimens with strong periodicity are tilted close to zone-axis orientation and produce ''anomalous'' image contrast because of strong dynamic diffraction components. Atomic-resolution reconstructions from tilt series containing zone-axis images (with their contrast enhanced by strong dynamical scattering) can be distorted when the stronger zone-axis images overwhelm images obtained in other ''random'' orientations in which atoms do not line up in neat columns. The first demonstrations of 3-D reconstruction to atomic resolution used five zone-axis images from test specimens of staurolite consisting of a mix of light and heavy atoms [2,3]. Initial resolution was to the 1.6{angstrom} Scherzer limit of a JEOL-ARM1000. Later experiments used focal-series reconstruction from 5 to 10 images to produce staurolite images from the ARM1000 with resolution extended beyond the Scherzer limit to 1.38{angstrom} [4,5]. To obtain a representation of the three-dimensional structure, images were obtained in zone-axis projections <100>, <010>, <001>, <101>, <310>, and combined to produce a three-dimensional map of Coulomb potential. Images of specimen sections are much more easily interpreted than projection images such as electron micrographs, reducing the need for techniques such as imaging at sub-Rayleigh resolution [6]. Sections through the 3D staurolite potential show atom positions as density peaks that display streaking from insufficient sampling in direction [1]. Three different specimens of perfect crystal were required to achieve the five projection directions; this makes the technique atomic-resolution electron crystallography rather than atomic-resolution tomography. Nevertheless, our results illustrate that dynamic diffraction need not be a limiting factor in atomic-resolution tomographic reconstruction. We have proposed combining ultra-high (sub-Angstrom) resolution zone-axis images with off-zone images by first using linear reconstruction of the off-zone images while excluding images obtained within a small range of tilts (of the order of 60 milliradian) of any zone-axis orientation [7], since it has been shown that dynamical effects can be mitigated by slight off-axis tilt of the specimen [8]. The (partial) reconstruction would then be used as a model for forward calculation by image simulation [9] in zone-axis directions and the structure refined iteratively to achieve satisfactory fits with the experimental zone-axis data. Another path to atomic-resolution tomography would combine ''zone-axis tomography'' with high-resolution dark-field hollow-cone (DFHC) imaging. Electron diffraction theory indicates that dynamic (multiple) scattering is much reduced under highly-convergent illumination. DFHC TEM is the analog of HAADF STEM, and imaging theory shows that image resolution can be enhanced under these conditions [10]. Images obtained in this mode could provide the initial reconstruction, with zone-axis images used for refinement [11].

Research Organization:
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (LBNL), Berkeley, CA (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Director. Office of Science. Office of Basic Energy Sciences (US)
DOE Contract Number:
AC03-76SF00098
OSTI ID:
842049
Report Number(s):
LBNL-57522; R&D Project: 503836; TRN: US200515%%963
Resource Relation:
Conference: Microscopy & Microanalysis 2005, Honolulu, HI (US), 07/31/2005--08/04/2005; Other Information: PBD: 15 Feb 2005
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English