Litcius/Paper detail

Fast X‐ray Nanotomography with Sub‐10 nm Resolution as a Powerful Imaging Tool for Nanotechnology and Energy Storage Applications

Vincent De Andrade, Viktor Nikitin, Michael Wojcik, Alex Deriy, Sunil Bean, Deming Shu, Tim Mooney, Kevin Peterson, Prabhat KC, Kenan Li, Sajid Ali, Kamel Fezzaa, Doğa Gürsoy, Cassandra Arico, Saliha Ouendi, David Troadec, Patrice Simon, Francesco De Carlo, Christophe Lethien

2021Advanced Materials67 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the last decade, transmission X-ray microscopes (TXMs) have come into operation in most of the synchrotrons worldwide. They have proven to be outstanding tools for non-invasive ex and in situ 3D characterization of materials at the nanoscale across varying range of scientific applications. However, their spatial resolution has not improved in many years, while newly developed functional materials and microdevices with enhanced performances exhibit nanostructures always finer. Here, optomechanical breakthroughs leading to fast 3D tomographic acquisitions (85 min) with sub-10 nm spatial resolution, narrowing the gap between X-ray and electron microscopy, are reported. These new achievements are first validated with 3D characterizations of nanolithography objects corresponding to ultrahigh-aspect-ratio hard X-ray zone plates. Then, this powerful technique is used to investigate the morphology and conformality of nanometer-thick film electrodes synthesized by atomic layer deposition and magnetron sputtering deposition methods on 3D silicon scaffolds for electrochemical energy storage applications.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceNanolithographyNanotechnologyNanometreNanostructureNanoscopic scaleSputter depositionCharacterization (materials science)Image resolutionSputteringOptoelectronicsThin filmOpticsFabricationComposite materialPathologyAlternative medicinePhysicsMedicineAdvanced Electron Microscopy Techniques and ApplicationsForce Microscopy Techniques and ApplicationsElectron and X-Ray Spectroscopy Techniques