Atomic-Resolution Cryogenic Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy for Quantum Materials.
Elisabeth BiancoLena F KourkoutisPublished in: Accounts of chemical research (2021)
ConspectusThe rich physics permeating the phase diagrams of quantum materials have commanded the attention of the solid-state chemistry, materials science, and condensed-matter physics communities, sparking immense research into quantum phase transitions including superconducting, ferroic, and charge-order transitions. Many of these transitions occur at low temperatures and involve electronic, magnetic, or lattice order, which emerges on the atomic to mesoscopic scales. The complex interplay of these states and the heterogeneity that arises due to competition and intertwining of phases, however, is not fully understood and requires probes that capture ordering over multiple length scales down to the local atomic symmetries. Advances in scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) have enabled atomic-resolution imaging as well as mapping of functional picometer-scale atomic displacements inside materials. In this Account, we discuss our group's work to expand the reach of atomic-resolution STEM to cryogenic temperatures (cryo-STEM) to study quantum materials with focus on charge-ordered systems.Charge-ordered phases, in which electrons as well as the atomic lattice form periodic patterns that lift the translational symmetries of the crystal, are not only intertwined with superconductivity but also underlie other exotic electronic phenomena such as colossal magnetoresistance and metal-insulator transitions. The periodic lattice distortions (PLDs) modulate the positions of the crystal's nuclei, which can be readily probed by electron microscopy. In a set of examples, we demonstrate cryo-STEM as a powerful technique for probing local order, nanometer-scale heterogeneities, and topological defects in charge-ordered manganites and in transition metal dichalcogenide charge density wave (CDW) systems.With the nearly commensurate-to-commensurate CDW transition upon cooling in 1T-TaS2, we show that nanoscale lattice textures in CDW phases can be revealed through direct imaging. These early atomic-resolution results, however, also highlighted the need for improvements in cryo-STEM imaging, which led to a push to advance data collection and analysis for direct spatial mapping and quantification of PLDs. By introducing an image registration algorithm developed specifically to accommodate fast, low signal-to-noise image acquisitions of crystalline lattices, we address previous limitations due to sample drift in cryo-STEM experiments. This has enabled subangstrom cryo-STEM imaging with sufficient signal-to-noise to reveal the low temperature structure of 1T'-TaTe2. Furthermore, it allows mapping and quantification of PLD atomic displacements in the charge-ordered manganites Bi0.35Sr0.18Ca0.47MnO3 and Nd0.5Sr0.5MnO3 with picometer precision at ∼95 K to resolve not only distinct ordered phases (i.e., site- and bond-centered charge order) but also their nanoscale coexistence within the same sample.Atomic-resolution cryo-STEM opens new opportunities for understanding the microscopic underpinnings of quantum phases. In this Account, we focus on spatial mapping of lattice degrees of freedom in phases that are present at temperatures down to liquid nitrogen. Further advances in instrumentation are needed to expand the temperature range and to also enable atomic-resolution measurements that rely on weaker signals such as electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) for probing of electronic structure or 4D-STEM approaches to map electric and magnetic fields.
Keyphrases
- electron microscopy
- high resolution
- single molecule
- solid state
- molecular dynamics
- solar cells
- deep learning
- machine learning
- small molecule
- mass spectrometry
- molecular dynamics simulations
- transition metal
- artificial intelligence
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- air pollution
- data analysis
- simultaneous determination
- tandem mass spectrometry