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Three-dimensional surface topography of graphene by divergent beam electron diffraction.

Tatiana LatychevskaiaWei-Hao HsuWei-Tse ChangChun-Yueh LinIng-Shouh Hwang
Published in: Nature communications (2017)
There are only a handful of scanning techniques that can provide surface topography at nanometre resolution. At the same time, there are no methods that are capable of non-invasive imaging of the three-dimensional surface topography of a thin free-standing crystalline material. Here we propose a new technique-the divergent beam electron diffraction (DBED) and show that it can directly image the inhomogeneity in the atomic positions in a crystal. Such inhomogeneities are directly transformed into the intensity contrast in the first-order diffraction spots of DBED patterns and the intensity contrast linearly depends on the wavelength of the employed probing electrons. Three-dimensional displacement of atoms as small as 1 angstrom can be detected when imaged with low-energy electrons (50-250 eV). The main advantage of DBED is that it allows visualization of the three-dimensional surface topography and strain distribution at the nanometre scale in non-scanning mode, from a single shot diffraction experiment.
Keyphrases
  • electron microscopy
  • magnetic resonance
  • high resolution
  • high intensity
  • single molecule
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • deep learning
  • computed tomography
  • mass spectrometry
  • contrast enhanced
  • monte carlo