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A high-speed area detector for novel imaging techniques in a scanning transmission electron microscope
Authors:TA Caswell  P Ercius  MW Tate  A Ercan  SM Gruner  DA Muller
Affiliation:1. Physics, Cornell University, 162 Clark Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA;2. Applied and Engineering Physics, Cornell University, E13 Clark Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA
Abstract:A scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM) produces a convergent beam electron diffraction pattern at each position of a raster scan with a focused electron beam, but recording this information poses major challenges for gathering and storing such large data sets in a timely manner and with sufficient dynamic range. To investigate the crystalline structure of materials, a 16×16 analog pixel array detector (PAD) is used to replace the traditional detectors and retain the diffraction information at every STEM raster position. The PAD, unlike a charge-coupled device (CCD) or photomultiplier tube (PMT), directly images 120–200 keV electrons with relatively little radiation damage, exhibits no afterglow and limits crosstalk between adjacent pixels. Traditional STEM imaging modes can still be performed by the PAD with a 1.1 kHz frame rate, which allows post-acquisition control over imaging conditions and enables novel imaging techniques based on the retained crystalline information. Techniques for rapid, semi-automatic crystal grain segmentation with sub-nanometer resolution are described using cross-correlation, sub-region integration, and other post-processing methods.
Keywords:Scanning transmission electron microscope  (STEM)  Pixel array detector (PAD)  Diffraction imaging  Crystal grain differentiation  Copper
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