Domain Formation in Synthetic Quartz

Author(s):  
Joseph J. Comer

Domains visible by transmission electron microscopy, believed to be Dauphiné inversion twins, were found in some specimens of synthetic quartz heated to 680°C and cooled to room temperature. With the electron beam close to parallel to the [0001] direction the domain boundaries appeared as straight lines normal to <100> and <410> or <510> directions. In the selected area diffraction mode, a shift of the Kikuchi lines was observed when the electron beam was made to traverse the specimen across a boundary. This shift indicates a change in orientation which accounts for the visibility of the domain by diffraction contrast when the specimen is tilted. Upon exposure to a 100 KV electron beam with a flux of 5x 1018 electrons/cm2sec the boundaries are rapidly decorated by radiation damage centers appearing as black spots. Similar crystallographio boundaries were sometimes found in unannealed (0001) quartz damaged by electrons.

Author(s):  
Joseph J. Comer ◽  
Charles Bergeron ◽  
Lester F. Lowe

Using a Van De Graaff Accelerator thinned specimens were subjected to bombardment by 3 MeV N+ ions to fluences ranging from 4x1013 to 2x1016 ions/cm2. They were then examined by transmission electron microscopy and reflection electron diffraction using a 100 KV electron beam.At the lowest fluence of 4x1013 ions/cm2 diffraction patterns of the specimens contained Kikuchi lines which appeared somewhat broader and more diffuse than those obtained on unirradiated material. No damage could be detected by transmission electron microscopy in unannealed specimens. However, Dauphiné twinning was particularly pronounced after heating to 665°C for one hour and cooling to room temperature. The twins, seen in Fig. 1, were often less than .25 μm in size, smaller than those formed in unirradiated material and present in greater number. The results are in agreement with earlier observations on the effect of electron beam damage on Dauphiné twinning.


Nanoscale ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (17) ◽  
pp. 7978-7983 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Cheng ◽  
Xianfang Zhu ◽  
Jiangbin Su

The coalescence of two single-crystalline Au nanoparticles on surface of amorphous SiOxnanowire, as induced by electron beam irradiation, wasin situstudied at room temperature in a transmission electron microscope.


2021 ◽  
Vol 63 (12) ◽  
pp. 2205
Author(s):  
Л.Е. Быкова ◽  
С.М. Жарков ◽  
В.Г. Мягков ◽  
Ю.Ю. Балашов ◽  
Г.С. Патрин

The study of the formation of the Cu6Sn5 intermetallic compound in Sn(55nm)/Cu(30nm) thin bilayer films was carried out directly in the column of a transmission electron microscope (electron diffraction mode) by heating the film sample from room temperature to 300 °C and recording the electron diffraction patterns. The thin films formed as a result of a solid state reaction were monophase and consisted of the η-Cu6Sn5 hexagonal phase. The temperature range for the formation of the η-Cu6Sn5 phase was determined. The estimate of the effective interdiffusion coefficient of the reaction suggests that the main mechanism for the formation of the Cu6Sn5 intermetallic is diffusion along the grain boundaries and dislocations.


2004 ◽  
Vol 19 (10) ◽  
pp. 3062-3067 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haiping Sun ◽  
Xiaoqing Pan

When exposed to air at room temperature, Zn nanoparticles oxidize gradually to form crystalline ZnO shells with a thickness of a few nanometers. Electron diffraction and high-resolution lattice imaging revealed that the ZnO layer on the Zn {0001} surface is composed of many epitaxial domains with small rotation angles relative to the lattice of the Zn core. The oxidized Zn particle bends when irradiated by the electron beam in a transmission electron microscope. This is due to the increase of internal stress in the ZnO layer as a result of the realignment of adjacent domains under electron beam irradiation. Corrosion of Zn nanoparticles was observed and the scaling and spalling start to occur on the {1010} prismatic faces.


1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 528-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. L. Smith ◽  
A. C. McLaren ◽  
R. G. O'Donnell

Optical and transmission electron microscopy has been used to study the cross-hatched microstructure (associated with the intersection of albite and pericline twin lamellae) that is characteristic of b*c* sections of anorthoclase. With the aid of a specimen-heating stage fitted to each microscope, the changes that occur in the microstructure on heating and subsequent cooling have been observed over the temperature range from ~20 to 950 °C. Observations of unheated crystals indicate that the cross-hatched microstructure consists of a chessboard pattern of triclinic areas (diagonal pairs of which are essentially albite-twin related) and of optically monoclinic areas that consist of domains of fine-scale albite-twin lamellae and domains of pericline-twin lamellae. The four-spot diffraction pattern characteristic of M twinning is observed only from volumes of specimen containing both types of domain. The complex twin interactions at the domain boundaries are described in detail. The changes in optical contrast of the twins when the crystals are heated are shown to be due to changes in the orientation of the refractive index ellipsoid; the disappearance of twins does not necessarily indicate a change to monoclinic symmetry. The observations also indicate that the relative stability of albite and pericline twins is a function of temperature, the pericline twin being more stable than the albite twin at high temperatures near the monoclinic–triclinic transformation and the opposite at room temperature. Evidence is also given that the twin microstructure that develops at the transformation is strongly influenced by external stress.


Author(s):  
L.I. Vershinina ◽  
G.A. Kopilov ◽  
R.E. Osipova ◽  
V.G. Pynko

Single crystal Co3Pd films were prepared by usual method of vacuum evaporation of alloy co0.75Pd0.25 on the (001)-plane of MgO single crystal heated up to 260°C at pressure of 10-4 torr. The films were annealed at 650°C for two hours with following cooling to the room temperature with speed of 0.5 dg/min at pressure of 10-5 torr. The alloy films of about 600 Å thick were examined. The structure of the CO3Pd films was investigated with transmission electron microscopy, operating at 100 kV. The deviation of the origin of the Ewald sphere from the symmetrical position was determined from the position of the Kikuchi lines. Films were oriented so that only reflections along the 010 systematic row were strongly excited. The film surface was parallel to the (00l)-plane (Fig.1a). The Co3Pd films had an ordered L12 lattice. Observed light-field images contains a large amount of the fringes, oriented along the [110] and [100] (Fig.lb).


Author(s):  
Nan Yao ◽  
J. M. Cowley

The RHEED (Reflection High Energy Electron Diffraction) patterns as essential indications of the diffraction conditions in relation to REM (Reflection Electron Microscopy) imaging provide a wealth of information about the surfaces. They contain extensive patterns of Kikuchi lines, bands and envelopes resulting from diffuse inelastic scattering processes. They also contain arrays of diffuse spots forbidden by the boundary conditions for elastic scattering but generated by multiple diffuse scattering processes.However, a word of caution has to be sounded. Strictly speaking, the normal RHEED pattern does not exactly present the diffraction condition for REM imaging in a commercial transmission electron microscope. Practical and theoretical studies of the electron optics of the illuminating system on a Philip-400T transmission electron microscope, in which the specimen is immersed in the magnetic field of the twin objective lens, indicate that the convergent angle of the incident electron beam can be adjusted precisely, in a range from about 0.1 mrad to 5 mrad, with a selection of the second condenser aperture size, by adjusting the excitation current in the second condenser lens. For the best contrast and illumination, the RHEED pattern is generally obtained by focusing the electron beam on the surface with the maximum convergence angle, and the REM image is obtained with an almost parallel illumination with the minimum convergence angle. A typical example obtained from a fresh cleavage (110) surface of InP single crystal is demonstrated in figure 1, in which (a) and (b) are RHEED patterns with the (10,10,0) specular Bragg-reflection condition fulfilled and correspond to the incident electron beam with 2 mrad and 0.2 mrad convergence angles, respectively; (c) is a REM image obtained under exactly the same operation condition as (b) except for changing from diffraction mode to image mode, which indeed has nothing to do with the illumination condition above the specimen position; and (c) is taken from an area consisting of many steps of atomic height. Comparison of (a) and (b) shows that, for the parallel electron illumination, only those diffraction spots are dominant which represent the possible diffracted directions and mark the intersections of Ewald sphere with reciprocal lattice rods of the crystal surface. The extensive Kikuchi lines, bands and envelopes, and even the parabolas appearing in (a), are scarcely visible in (b). This suggests that the channeling effects characterized as the appearance of surface diffraction parabolas showing in RHEED pattern are mainly caused by the portion of electrons with incident direction slightly deviated from the rows of atoms; that is, the inelastically scattered electrons propagating in the directions of rows of atoms only occur when the initial incident electrons interact with the lattice in a direction slightly different from that of the rows of atoms. Following this argument, we may propose that the contrasts observed in REM image are mostly contributed from the diffraction and phase contrasts.


Author(s):  
Henri CHANZY ◽  
Francoise Gaill ◽  
Marie-Madeleine Giraud-Guille ◽  
Jan Persson ◽  
Junji Sugiyama ◽  
...  

Chitin the poly β (1-4)-N Acetyl D glucosamine is widespread in nature and occurs normally as a crystalline fibrillar substance. As opposed to most of the crystalline polysaccharides, chitin is quite resistant to the electron beam. In particular, at room temperature, accumulated doses as high as 200 elec/nm2 at 120 kV can be used to record successful images showing crystalline details. For this reason, chitin can be studied without too much difficulty by electron diffraction (ED), diffraction contrast transmission electron microscopy (DCTEM) and lattice imaging. This study presents some of the diversity of chitin morphology.Several chitin rich specimens were studied. They include : 1) cross sections of an ovipositor from an ichneumon fly Rhyssa persuosaria ; 2) cross sections of fragments of demineralized crab cuticle ; 3) cross sections of a tube from the vestimentiferan worm Tevnia jerichonana ; 4) bundles of chitin microfibrils isolated from Tevnia tube fragments after deproteinization.


Author(s):  
Yootaek Kim ◽  
Tung Hsu

When applying the reflection high energy electron diffraction (RHEED) and reflection electron microscopy (REM) methods[1] on the study of crystal surfaces it is necessary to index the RHEED spots and recognize the azimuth of the electron beam direction. This can be difficult because the RHEED pattern, unlike the transmission electron diffraction (TED) pattern, is distorted by the inner potential of the specimen and only one half of the pattern is shown. We found that it is useful, at the beginning of working on a certain surface of a certain crystal, to record a panoramic RHEED pattern by rotating the crystal through a large azimuth angle. This produces a map which is similar to the Kikuchi maps[2] used in transmission electron microscopy (TEM).Two examples of these panoramic RHEED patterns, one from the Pt(111) [3] and the other from α-Al203 (0001) [4,5,6), are shown in Figs. 1 and 2.The transmission Kikuchi maps are recorded using a specimen of suitable thickness such that the Kikuchi lines are strong and the diffraction spots are practically invisible. On the contrary, in making the panoramic RHEED patterns (or RHEED maps) we have no control over the thickness of the specimen. The electron beam enters and exits the same surface of the crystal; therefore, the relative intensities of the Bragg diffracted spots and the Kikuchi lines are not adjustable. The only adjustment lies in choosing the accelerating voltage and the incidence angle of the electrons such that the RHEED pattern has relatively low diffuse scattering.


1990 ◽  
Vol 198 ◽  
Author(s):  
F.H. Kaatz ◽  
J. Van der Spiegel ◽  
W.R. Graham

ABSTRACTThe epitaxial structure of ErSi2−x on Si(1 11) has been investigated using Rutherford backscattering (RBS) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Films 10 nm. thick show channeling minimum yields of 4% after room temperature deposition and annealing to 800°C. Plan view electron microscopy on ultrathin layers 0.5 nm. to 10 nm. thick reveals the formation of a complex microstructure involving vacancy ordering in these films. This superlattice structure is interpreted by considering domain formation and twinning in the heteroepitaxial ErSi2−x.


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