High resolution Autofocused Virtual Source Imaging (AVSI)

Author(s):  
J. Camacho ◽  
J. F. Cruza
Author(s):  
T. Miyokawa ◽  
S. Norioka ◽  
S. Goto

Field emission SEMs (FE-SEMs) are becoming popular due to their high resolution needs. In the field of semiconductor product, it is demanded to use the low accelerating voltage FE-SEM to avoid the electron irradiation damage and the electron charging up on samples. However the accelerating voltage of usual SEM with FE-gun is limited until 1 kV, which is not enough small for the present demands, because the virtual source goes far from the tip in lower accelerating voltages. This virtual source position depends on the shape of the electrostatic lens. So, we investigated several types of electrostatic lenses to be applicable to the lower accelerating voltage. In the result, it is found a field emission gun with a conical anode is effectively applied for a wide range of low accelerating voltages.A field emission gun usually consists of a field emission tip (cold cathode) and the Butler type electrostatic lens.


2016 ◽  
Vol 127 (5) ◽  
pp. 2308-2316 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles W. Huang ◽  
Ming-Xiong Huang ◽  
Zhengwei Ji ◽  
Ashley Robb Swan ◽  
Anne Marie Angeles ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Josselin Garnier ◽  
George Papanicolaou

Geophysics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 84 (3) ◽  
pp. KS71-KS83 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tieyuan Zhu ◽  
Junzhe Sun ◽  
Davide Gei ◽  
José M. Carcione ◽  
Philippe Cance ◽  
...  

The generation of microseismic events is often associated with induced fractures/faults during the extraction/injection of fluids. A full characterization of the spatiotemporal distribution of microseismic events provides constraints on fluid migration paths in the formations. We have developed a high-resolution source imaging method — a hybrid multiplicative time-reversal imaging (HyM-TRI) algorithm, for automatically tracking the spatiotemporal distribution of microseismic events. HyM-TRI back propagates the data traces from groups of receivers (in space and time) as receiver wavefields, multiplies receiver wavefields between all groups, and applies a causal integration over time to obtain a source evolution image. Using synthetic and field-data examples, we revealed the capability of the HyM-TRI technique to image the spatiotemporal sequence of asynchronous microseismic events, which poses a challenge to standard TRI methods. Moreover, the HyM-TRI technique is robust enough to produce a high-resolution image of the source in the presence of noise. The aperture of the 2D receiver array (azimuth coverage in 3D) with respect to the microseismic source area plays an important role on the horizontal and vertical resolution of the source image. The HyM-TRI results of the field data with 3D azimuthal coverage further verify our argument by producing a superior resolution of the source than TRI.


Author(s):  
Dong-Il Hyun ◽  
Young-Cheol Park ◽  
Dae Hee Youn

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