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Journal of Electron Microscopy Advance Access originally published online on January 22, 2009
Journal of Electron Microscopy 2009 58(3):157-165; doi:10.1093/jmicro/dfn029
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© The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Japanese Society of Microscopy. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

This article appears in the following Journal of Electron Microscopy issue: Special number: Advanced electron microscopy in materials physics [View the issue table of contents]

Aberration-corrected ADF-STEM depth sectioning and prospects for reliable 3D imaging in S/TEM

Huolin L. Xin1 and David A. Muller2,*

1 Department of Physics
2 School of Applied and Engineering Physics, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: dm24{at}cornell.edu

The short depth of focus of aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopes (STEMs) could potentially enable 3D reconstruction of nanomaterials through acquisition of a through-focal series. However, the contrast transfer function of annular dark-field (ADF)-STEM depth sectioning has a missing-cone problem similar to that of tilt-series tomography. The elongation as a function of the probe-forming angle is found to be Formula . For existing aberration-corrected STEMs operated at optimal imaging conditions, the elongation factor for depth sectioning is larger than 30. This large elongation factor results in highly distorted shapes of 3D objects and unexpected artifacts due to the loss of information. Depth-sectioning experiments using a 33-mrad 100 keV C5-corrected aberration-corrected STEM demonstrate the elongation effect and the missing-cone problem in real and reciprocal space. The performance limits of different S/TEM-based imaging modes are compared. There is a missing cone of information for bright-field S/TEM, ADF-STEM, hollow-cone ADF-STEM and coherent scanning confocal electron microscopy (SCEM). Only incoherent SCEM fills the missing cone.

Keywords     depth sectioning, scanning transmission electron microscope, aberration-corrected STEM, scanning confocal electron microscope

Received     22 October 2008, accepted 3 December 2008


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