Scanning transmission electron microscopy under controlled low-pressure atmospheres. 2019

Gregor T Leuthner, and Stefan Hummel, and Clemens Mangler, and Timothy J Pennycook, and Toma Susi, and Jannik C Meyer, and Jani Kotakoski
Faculty of Physics, University of Vienna, Boltzmanngasse 5, Vienna 1090, Austria.

Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) is carried out in vacuum to minimize the interaction of the imaging electrons with gas molecules while passing through the microscope column. Nevertheless, in typical devices, the pressure remains at 10-7 mbar or above, providing a large number of gas molecules for the electron beam to crack, which can lead to structural changes in the sample. Here, we describe experiments carried out in a modified scanning TEM (STEM) instrument, based on the Nion UltraSTEM 100. In this instrument, the base pressure at the sample is around 2×10-10 mbar, and can be varied up to 10-6 mbar through introduction of gases directly into the objective area while maintaining atomic resolution imaging conditions. We show that air leaked into the microscope column during the experiment is efficient in cleaning graphene samples from contamination, but ineffective in damaging the pristine lattice. Our experiments also show that exposure to O2 and H2O lead to a similar result, oxygen providing an etching effect nearly twice as efficient as water, presumably due to the two O atoms per molecule. H2 and N2 environments have no influence on etching. These results show that the residual gas environment in typical TEM instruments can have a large influence on the observations, and show that chemical etching of carbon-based structures can be effectively carried out with oxygen.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries

Related Publications

Gregor T Leuthner, and Stefan Hummel, and Clemens Mangler, and Timothy J Pennycook, and Toma Susi, and Jannik C Meyer, and Jani Kotakoski
March 2010, Nano letters,
Gregor T Leuthner, and Stefan Hummel, and Clemens Mangler, and Timothy J Pennycook, and Toma Susi, and Jannik C Meyer, and Jani Kotakoski
January 2010, Journal of electron microscopy,
Gregor T Leuthner, and Stefan Hummel, and Clemens Mangler, and Timothy J Pennycook, and Toma Susi, and Jannik C Meyer, and Jani Kotakoski
April 1974, Journal of microscopy,
Gregor T Leuthner, and Stefan Hummel, and Clemens Mangler, and Timothy J Pennycook, and Toma Susi, and Jannik C Meyer, and Jani Kotakoski
May 2018, Ultramicroscopy,
Gregor T Leuthner, and Stefan Hummel, and Clemens Mangler, and Timothy J Pennycook, and Toma Susi, and Jannik C Meyer, and Jani Kotakoski
July 1978, Rinsho byori. The Japanese journal of clinical pathology,
Gregor T Leuthner, and Stefan Hummel, and Clemens Mangler, and Timothy J Pennycook, and Toma Susi, and Jannik C Meyer, and Jani Kotakoski
January 1994, Methods of biochemical analysis,
Gregor T Leuthner, and Stefan Hummel, and Clemens Mangler, and Timothy J Pennycook, and Toma Susi, and Jannik C Meyer, and Jani Kotakoski
July 2011, Ultramicroscopy,
Gregor T Leuthner, and Stefan Hummel, and Clemens Mangler, and Timothy J Pennycook, and Toma Susi, and Jannik C Meyer, and Jani Kotakoski
February 2014, Microscopy and microanalysis : the official journal of Microscopy Society of America, Microbeam Analysis Society, Microscopical Society of Canada,
Gregor T Leuthner, and Stefan Hummel, and Clemens Mangler, and Timothy J Pennycook, and Toma Susi, and Jannik C Meyer, and Jani Kotakoski
May 2019, Micron (Oxford, England : 1993),
Gregor T Leuthner, and Stefan Hummel, and Clemens Mangler, and Timothy J Pennycook, and Toma Susi, and Jannik C Meyer, and Jani Kotakoski
July 1983, Science (New York, N.Y.),
Copied contents to your clipboard!