scholarly journals A new technique for measuring the separation of closely spaced dislocations using residual-contrast conditions

Author(s):  
J. E. Angelo ◽  
M. J. Mills

In order to measure the spacing of closely spaced dislocations, a method with sufficient spatial resolution must be used. High resolution imaging provides one method of determining the spacing of paired dislocations, but care must be taken since these authors have shown that thin film effects can give rise to structures not present in bulk materials. To date, the most widely used method of determining the spacing of paired dislocations is the weak-beam dark field method. This method has proved extremely useful in the study of many systems, see Cockayne3 for a review. One of the difficulties of the weak-beam method is that the observed peak positions do not generally correspond to the actual position of the partial dislocation cores. Correlation of the peak positions with the true position depends on the deviation parameter, foil thickness, and position of the dislocations within the foil.

Author(s):  
L. J. Chen ◽  
K. Seshan

The weak beam dark field and high order bright field imaging(2) methods are powerful means for improving the resolution of images detected by diffraction contrast. However, at high voltages, many beam interactions become important as more interband transitions occur between different Bloch waves. At the exact Bragg condition, for any order reflection, usually more than two interband transitions are important for both weak beam and bright field images, and complicated images result.


Author(s):  
J. M. Oblak ◽  
B. H. Kear

The “weak-beam” and systematic many-beam techniques are the currently available methods for resolution of closely spaced dislocations or other inhomogeneities imaged through strain contrast. The former is a dark field technique and image intensities are usually very weak. The latter is a bright field technique, but generally use of a high voltage instrument is required. In what follows a bright field method for obtaining enhanced resolution of partial dislocations at 100 KV accelerating potential will be described.A brief discussion of an application will first be given. A study of intermediate temperature creep processes in commercial nickel-base alloys strengthened by the Ll2 Ni3 Al γ precipitate has suggested that partial dislocations such as those labelled 1 and 2 in Fig. 1(a) are in reality composed of two closely spaced a/6 <112> Shockley partials. Stacking fault contrast, when present, tends to obscure resolution of the partials; thus, conditions for resolution must be chosen such that the phase shift at the fault is 0 or a multiple of 2π.


2007 ◽  
Vol 550 ◽  
pp. 259-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.Ya. Kochubey ◽  
Vladimir Serebryany ◽  
V.N. Timofeev

Ductility of Mg – alloys is linked to a shortage of independent slip systems. Basaltextured samples of Mg-Al-Zn alloy are examined for presence of dislocations of different types after hot compression tests of cast samples and cold compression tests of hot-rolled samples. The JEM-1000, electron transmission microscope with an accelerating voltage of 750 kV using a dark field–weak beam method of observation and the g·b=0 invisibility criterion as a basic method of the analysis of Burgers vectors, is used to analyse the samples. Dislocations with Burgers vectors <a>, [c] and <a+c> are found. The results are used to evaluate the dislocation density and determine the possible dislocation reactions.


Minerals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 388 ◽  
Author(s):  
Max R. Verdugo-Ihl ◽  
Cristiana L. Ciobanu ◽  
Ashley Slattery ◽  
Nigel J. Cook ◽  
Kathy Ehrig ◽  
...  

Metal nanoparticles (NP) in minerals are an emerging field of research. Development of advanced analytical techniques such as Z-contrast imaging and mapping using high-angle annular dark field scanning transmission electron microscopy (HAADF STEM) allows unparalleled insights at the nanoscale. Moreover, the technique provides a link between micron-scale textures and chemical patterns if the sample is extracted in situ from a location of petrogenetic interest. Here we use HAADF STEM imaging and energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry (EDX) mapping/spot analysis on focused ion beam prepared foils to characterise atypical Cu-As-zoned and weave-twinned hematite from the Olympic Dam deposit, South Australia. We aim to determine the role of solid-solution versus the presence of discrete included NPs in the observed zoning and to understand Cu-As-enrichment processes. Relative to the grain surface, the Cu-As bands extend in depth as (sub)vertical trails of opposite orientation, with Si-bearing hematite NP inclusions on one side and coarser cavities (up to hundreds of nm) on the other. The latter host Cu and Cu-As NPs, contain mappable K, Cl, and C, and display internal voids with rounded morphologies. Aside from STEM-EDX mapping, the agglomeration of native copper NPs was also assessed by high-resolution imaging. Collectively, such characteristics, corroborated with the geometrical outlines and negative crystal shapes of the cavities, infer that these are opened fluid inclusions with NPs attached to inclusion walls. Hematite along the trails features distinct nanoscale domains with lattice defects (twins, 2-fold superstructuring) relative to hematite outside the trails, indicating this is a nanoprecipitate formed during replacement processes, i.e., coupled dissolution and reprecipitation reactions (CDRR). Transient porosity intrinsically developed during CDRR can trap fluids and metals. Needle-shaped and platelet Cu-As NPs are also observed along (sub)horizontal bands along which Si, Al and K is traceable along the margins. The same signature is depicted along nm-wide planes crosscutting at 60° and offsetting (012)-twins in weave-twinned hematite. High-resolution imaging shows linear and planar defects, kink deformation along the twin planes, misorientation and lattice dilation around duplexes of Si-Al-K-planes. Such defects are evidence of strain, induced during fluid percolation along channels that become wider and host sericite platelets, as well as Cl-K-bearing inclusions, comparable with those from the Cu-As-zoned hematite, although without metal NPs. The Cu-As-bands mapped in hematite correspond to discrete NPs formed during interaction with fluids that changed in composition from alkali-silicic to Cl- and metal-bearing brines, and to fluid rates that evolved from slow infiltration to erratic inflow controlled by fault-valve mechanism pumping. This explains the presence of Cu-As NPs hosted either along Si-Al-K-planes (fluid supersaturation), or in fluid inclusions (phase separation during depressurisation) as well as the common signatures observed in hematite with variable degrees of fluid-mineral interaction. The invoked fluids are typical of hydrolytic alteration and the fluid pumping mechanism is feasible via fault (re)activation. Using a nanoscale approach, we show that fluid-mineral interaction can be fingerprinted at the (atomic) scale at which element exchange occurs.


2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Akihiro Suzuki ◽  
Kei Shimomura ◽  
Makoto Hirose ◽  
Nicolas Burdet ◽  
Yukio Takahashi

Author(s):  
Douglas C. Barker

A number of satisfactory methods are available for the electron microscopy of nicleic acids. These methods concentrated on fragments of nuclear, viral and mitochondrial DNA less than 50 megadaltons, on denaturation and heteroduplex mapping (Davies et al 1971) or on the interaction between proteins and DNA (Brack and Delain 1975). Less attention has been paid to the experimental criteria necessary for spreading and visualisation by dark field electron microscopy of large intact issociations of DNA. This communication will report on those criteria in relation to the ultrastructure of the (approx. 1 x 10-14g) DNA component of the kinetoplast from Trypanosomes. An extraction method has been developed to eliminate native endonucleases and nuclear contamination and to isolate the kinetoplast DNA (KDNA) as a compact network of high molecular weight. In collaboration with Dr. Ch. Brack (Basel [nstitute of Immunology), we studied the conditions necessary to prepare this KDNA Tor dark field electron microscopy using the microdrop spreading technique.


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