Litcius/Paper detail

A symmetry-derived mechanism for atomic resolution imaging

Matúš Krajňák, Joanne Etheridge

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We introduce an image-contrast mechanism for scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) that derives from the local symmetry within the specimen. For a given position of the electron probe on the specimen, the image intensity is determined by the degree of similarity between the exit electron-intensity distribution and a chosen symmetry operation applied to that distribution. The contrast mechanism detects both light and heavy atomic columns and is robust with respect to specimen thickness, electron-probe energy, and defocus. Atomic columns appear as sharp peaks that can be significantly narrower than for STEM images using conventional disk and annular detectors. This fundamentally different contrast mechanism complements conventional imaging modes and can be acquired simultaneously with them, expanding the power of STEM for materials characterization.

Topics & Concepts

Scanning transmission electron microscopySymmetry (geometry)OpticsElectronResolution (logic)PhysicsMechanism (biology)Image contrastContrast (vision)Position (finance)Intensity (physics)Scanning confocal electron microscopyElectron microscopeMaterials scienceMolecular physicsGeometryComputer scienceMathematicsArtificial intelligenceEconomicsQuantum mechanicsFinanceAdvanced Electron Microscopy Techniques and ApplicationsElectron and X-Ray Spectroscopy TechniquesAdvancements in Photolithography Techniques