4.6 Article

Energy-filtered dark-field imaging of nanoparticles by PINEM in 4D electron microscopy

Journal

APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS
Volume 120, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0090284

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Funding

  1. South China University of Technology

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Time-resolved dark-field imaging of alpha Fe2O3 nanoparticle and Ag nanowires using scattered electrons by selected crystal planes is achieved by photon-induced near-field electron microscopy (PINEM) with high spatiotemporal resolution.
Time-resolved dark-field imaging of alpha Fe2O3 nanoparticle and Ag nanowires using scattered electrons by selected crystal planes are realized by photon-induced near-field electron microscopy (PINEM) selecting probing electrons which absorb energy from a transient laser field during their passage through the target particles in a four-dimensional transmission electron microscope (4D-TEM). The high laser fluence illuminated on the particles causes significant part of probing swift electrons exchange energy with the laser light, creating enough PINEM electrons required for the dark-field imaging of particles with high spatiotemporal resolution at nanometer and femtosecond scale. Different from the bright-field PINEM imaging of particles where the outerspace with a close distance to the particle are illuminated by transmitted PINEM electrons, illumination is confined on the particles by selected scattered PINEM electrons, leading to a much more defined and sharp imaging of particles compared with a bright-field PINEM image. In combination with PINEM temporal gating and dark-field selective imaging, the PINEM dark-field imaging technique in the 4D-TEM enables the studies of structural dynamics of selective crystal planes or elements with high spatiotemporal resolution.& nbsp;Published under an exclusive license by AIP Publishing

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