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Exploring the accuracy of isotopic analyses in atom probe mass spectrometry

Frederick Meisenkothen, Daniel V. Samarov, Irina Kalish, Eric B. Steel

2020Ultramicroscopy35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Atom probe tomography (APT) can theoretically deliver accurate chemical and isotopic analyses at a high level of sensitivity, precision, and spatial resolution. However, empirical APT data often contain significant biases that lead to erroneous chemical concentration and isotopic abundance measurements. The present study explores the accuracy of quantitative isotopic analyses performed via atom probe mass spectrometry. A machine learning-based adaptive peak fitting algorithm was developed to provide a reproducible and mathematically defensible means to determine peak shapes and intensities in the mass spectrum for specific ion species. The isotopic abundance measurements made with the atom probe are compared directly with the known isotopic abundance values for each of the materials. Even in the presence of exceedingly high numbers of multi-hit detection events (up to 80%), and in the absence of any deadtime corrections, our approach produced isotopic abundance measurements having an accuracy consistent with values limited predominantly by counting statistics.

Topics & Concepts

Natural abundanceIsotopeMass spectrometryAbundance (ecology)ChemistryResolution (logic)Analytical Chemistry (journal)Isotopic ratioChemical speciesAccuracy and precisionAtom probeAtom (system on chip)PhysicsChromatographyNuclear physicsComputer scienceOrganic chemistryEmbedded systemArtificial intelligenceCrystallographyMicrostructureFisheryBiologyQuantum mechanicsAdvanced Materials Characterization TechniquesHydrogen embrittlement and corrosion behaviors in metalsFusion materials and technologies
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