High-Resolution Imaging with an Aberration-Corrected Transmission Electron Micrscope

2001 ◽  
Vol 7 (S2) ◽  
pp. 904-905
Author(s):  
M. Lentzen ◽  
B. Jahnen ◽  
C.L. Jia ◽  
K. Urban

In electron microscopy high-resolution imaging of finest object structures is generally hampered by the influence of aberrations of the lens system, especially the high spherical aberration of the objective lens. The delocalization of contrast details induced by aberrations is especially strong for microscopes equipped with a field emission gun providing a high spatial coherence. in recent years a prototype of an aberration correction system has been constructed by Haider et al., following a suggestion by Rose, consisting of two hexapole elements and four additional round lenses. The correction system was adapted to a Philips CM 200 FEG ST microscope with an information limit of 0.13 nm. The alignment is carried out using aberration measurements deduced from Zemlin tableaus. By appropriately exciting the hexapole elements it is possible to reduce or even fully compensate the spherical aberration of the objective lens.With the freedom of a variable spherical aberration Cs new operation modes can be accessed that are not available in standard microscopes. with Cs = 0 and defocus Z = 0 pure amplitude contrast occurs, together with a vanishing contrast delocalization; phase contrast with a single, narrow pass-band up to the information limit can still be achieved by Z = ±7 nm, which introduces a delocalization of R = 0.13 nm. with Cs = 97 μm and Z = −18 nm the broad Scherzer pass-band for phase contrast can be extended to the information limit, with R = 0.35 nm. For the CM 200 Cs = 43 fim and Z = −12 nm still produces a high level of phase contrast, comparable with the extended Scherzer pass-band, but with R = 0.08 nm only. in the latter mode Scherzer’s defocus equals Lichte's defocus of least confusion.

Author(s):  
J.G. Bakker ◽  
P.E.S. Asselbergs

High resolution TEM imaging has been well established as superb technique for obtaining structural information about materials on an atomic scale. Trends in equipment for high resolution imaging have progressed to the stage where point resolutions below 2 Å can be obtained at 200 kV. This paper describes such a new objective lens for the Philips CM20 Transmission Electron Microscope.In designing a new objective lens, several parameters have to be taken into account. Not only should the coefficient of spherical aberration of the objective lens be minimised, the lens should also allow considerable tilting of the specimen in two directions. The lens should be compatible with X-ray analysis. And last but not least, the design of lens must ensure that the heat transfer of the lens to the specimen environment is minimised.


Author(s):  
H.S. von Harrach ◽  
D.E. Jesson ◽  
S.J. Pennycook

Phase contrast TEM has been the leading technique for high resolution imaging of materials for many years, whilst STEM has been the principal method for high-resolution microanalysis. However, it was demonstrated many years ago that low angle dark-field STEM imaging is a priori capable of almost 50% higher point resolution than coherent bright-field imaging (i.e. phase contrast TEM or STEM). This advantage was not exploited until Pennycook developed the high-angle annular dark-field (ADF) technique which can provide an incoherent image showing both high image resolution and atomic number contrast.This paper describes the design and first results of a 300kV field-emission STEM (VG Microscopes HB603U) which has improved ADF STEM image resolution towards the 1 angstrom target. The instrument uses a cold field-emission gun, generating a 300 kV beam of up to 1 μA from an 11-stage accelerator. The beam is focussed on to the specimen by two condensers and a condenser-objective lens with a spherical aberration coefficient of 1.0 mm.


Author(s):  
M. Haider ◽  
P. Hartel ◽  
H. Müller ◽  
S. Uhlemann ◽  
J. Zach

The achievable resolution of a modern transmission electron microscope (TEM) is mainly limited by the inherent aberrations of the objective lens. Hence, one major goal over the past decade has been the development of aberration correctors to compensate the spherical aberration. Such a correction system is now available and it is possible to improve the resolution with this corrector. When high resolution in a TEM is required, one important parameter, the field of view, also has to be considered. In addition, especially for the large cameras now available, the compensation of off-axial aberrations is also an important task. A correction system to compensate the spherical aberration and the off-axial coma is under development. The next step to follow towards ultra-high resolution will be a correction system to compensate the chromatic aberration. With such a correction system, a new area will be opened for applications for which the chromatic aberration defines the achievable resolution, even if the spherical aberration is corrected. This is the case, for example, for low-voltage electron microscopy (EM) for the investigation of beam-sensitive materials, for dynamic EM or for in-situ EM.


Author(s):  
Charles W. Allen ◽  
Kenneth H. Westmacotp

With the development of the Atomic Resolution Microscope (JEOL ARM-1000) about a decade ago and the current availability of new ultra high resolution HVEMs, the important role of HVEM in high resolution imaging has been well achieved. Higher spatial resolution imaging is attainable with higher energy electrons without sacrificing sample tilting capability by virtue of a smaller CSλ value. When commercial HVEMs first became available in the mid 1960's, however, it was not the prospect of high resolution imaging which seemed most important but rather the fact that, for a given material, significantly thicker specimens could be examined.The microstructures (ultrastructures) and physical behavior of these foils (up to 15 μm thick) would be more representative of those for the bulk material. And especially for materials science applications two other factors were also of paramount importance: (1) the controlled generation of vacancy-interstitial (Frenkel) pairs in crystalline pure elements and alloys by high energy electron irradiation became possible and (2) the increased working space in the objective lens region allowed some miniaturized experimental apparatus to be incorporated.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tonmoy Chakraborty ◽  
Bingying Chen ◽  
Stephan Daetwyler ◽  
Bo-Jui Chang ◽  
Oliver Vanderpoorten ◽  
...  

Abstract In optical microscopy, the slow axial scanning rate of the objective or the sample has traditionally limited the speed of volumetric imaging. Recently, by conjugating either a movable mirror to the image plane in a remote-focusing geometry or an electrically tuneable lens (ETL) to the back focal plane, rapid axial scanning has been achieved. However, mechanical actuation of a mirror limits the axial scanning rate (usually only 10–100 Hz for piezoelectric or voice coil-based actuators), while ETLs introduce spherical and higher-order aberrations that prevent high-resolution imaging. In an effort to overcome these limitations, we introduce a novel optical design that transforms a lateral-scan motion into a spherical aberration-free axial scan that can be used for high-resolution imaging. Using a galvanometric mirror, we scan a laser beam laterally in a remote-focusing arm, which is then back-reflected from different heights of a mirror in the image space. We characterize the optical performance of this remote-focusing technique and use it to accelerate axially swept light-sheet microscopy by an order of magnitude, allowing the quantification of rapid vesicular dynamics in three dimensions. We also demonstrate resonant remote focusing at 12 kHz with a two-photon raster-scanning microscope, which allows rapid imaging of brain tissues and zebrafish cardiac dynamics with diffraction-limited resolution.


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