4.4 Article

Choice of operating voltage for a transmission electron microscope

Journal

ULTRAMICROSCOPY
Volume 145, Issue -, Pages 85-93

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ultramic.2013.10.019

Keywords

TEM; STEM; Resolution; Contrast; Radiation damage; Accelerating voltage

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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An accelerating voltage of 100-300 kV remains a good choice for the majority of TEM or STEM specimens, avoiding the expense of high-voltage microscopy but providing the possibility of atomic resolution even in the absence of lens-aberration correction. For specimens thicker than a few tens of nm, the image intensity and scattering contrast are likely to be higher than at lower voltage, as is the visibility of ionization edges below 1000 eV (as required for EELS elemental analysis). In thick (> 100 nm) specimens, higher voltage ensures less beam broadening and better spatial resolution for STEM imaging and EDX spectroscopy. Low-voltage (e.g. 30 kV) TEM or STEM is attractive for a very thin (e.g. 10 nm) specimen, as it provides higher scattering contrast and fewer problems for valence-excitation EELS. Specimens that are immune to radiolysis suffer knock-on damage at high current densities, and this form of radiation damage can be reduced or avoided by choosing a low accelerating voltage. Low-voltage STEM with an aberration-corrected objective lens (together with a high-angle dark-field detector and/or EELS) offers atomic resolution and elemental identification from very thin specimens. Conventional TEIV1 can provide atomic resolution in low-voltage phase-contrast images but requires correction of chromatic aberration and preferably an electron-beam monochromator. Many non-concluding (e.g organic) specimens damage easily by racliolysis and radiation damage then determines the TEIV1 image resolution. For bright-field scattering contrast low kV can provide slightly better dose-limited resolution if the specimen is very thin (a few nm) but considerably better resolution is possible from a thicker specimen, for which higher kV is required. Use of a phase plate in a conventional TEM offers the most dose-efficient way of achieving atomic resolution from beam-sensitive specimens. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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