透射电子显微镜
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Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) and Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy (STEM) Analysis
Technical Principle
TEM and STEM are analogous techniques that utilize electron beams for sample imaging, achieving remarkable resolutions of 1-2Å. These methods employ high-energy electrons (80keV-200keV) to penetrate electron-transparent samples (typically ~100nm thick). While offering superior spatial resolution compared to SEM, TEM/STEM requires more sophisticated sample preparation protocols.
Key Applications
• Metrology with 1nm resolution capability
• Identification of nanoscale defects in ICs (embedded particles, via residues)
• Nanocrystalline phase determination
• Nanoparticle characterization (size, core/shell studies, agglomeration, annealing effects)
• Catalyst research
• Nanoscale elemental mapping
• III-V superlattice characterization
• Crystal defect analysis (dislocations, grain boundaries, voids, stacking faults)
Advantages of TEM/STEM
• Unparalleled spatial resolution for elemental mapping among analytical techniques
• Sub-nanometer (<1Å) imaging resolution
• Capability for nanoscale crystallographic analysis
• Strong contrast differentiation between crystalline/amorphous materials without chemical staining
Technical Limitations
• Extended sample preparation time (1-4 hours)
• Limited sampling volume (typical specimen dimensions: 100nm thickness × 5μm×5μm area)
• Potential beam sensitivity for certain materials under high-energy electron irradiation
Performance Specifications
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Resolution: 1-2Å (image), <1nm (elemental mapping)
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Accelerating Voltage: 80-200kV
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Typical Sample Thickness: ≤100nm
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Analytical Capabilities:
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Crystallographic structure determination
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Compositional mapping (EDS/EELS)
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Defect characterization at atomic scale
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