Nanoworld in 3D

Elemental analysis at atomic scale
Element-specificity can be obtained with suitable detectors such as X-ray or electron energy-loss spectrometers (EELS) interfaced to the microscope. In order to properly incorporate and synchronize all physicochemical signals on the ASTEM, much effort went into the correct implementation of software and hardware. Tightly cooperating with the US company Gatan Inc. over many years, an efficient operating environment could be designed that carries the handwriting of the workgroup. With this unique configuration it was for the first time possible to study elemental concentrations on a specific crystallographic lattice site. The work, published in the magazine Physical Review Letters, revealed that the recorded analytical intensities can only be understood by complementary simulations. These calculations are carried out by cooperation partners in theory groups located in Melbourne (Australia) and Tokyo (Japan).
Electron tomography – the third dimension
Three-dimensional diagnostic tools have given insights into the human body, which classical X-ray imaging cannot deliver. In analogy, structural details from a thin and transparent TEM (transmission electron microscopy) specimen sample can also remain obstructed when observed from a single projection only. Approximately 100 years ago, the Viennese Johann Radon laid down the mathematical basis for tomography by showing that a sufficient number of projections taken from different viewing angles enable the three-dimensional reconstruction of an object when subject to an inverse Radon transformation. Electron tomography in the physical sciences, being experimentally rather challenging, only became popular about 15 years ago. We started our research in this highly dynamic field in 2009. Besides developing new experimental approaches, the workgroup deals with the complex problem of optimizing and adjusting reconstruction algorithms for the respective microscope signals and how to correlate theoretical information with 3D data such that more physically meaningful information can be extracted from the experiment. This shall be exemplified in two co-operation projects with the Institute of Experimental Physics at TU Graz and the Institute of Physics at the University of Graz.Metallic nanoclusters
A study published in the magazine Nature Communications is dealing with the synthesis and characterization of metallic nanoclusters in superfluid Helium. The issues under question were the growth mechanism, and the structure and chemical composition of these clusters. To answer this, our post-doc Georg Haberfehlner first developed a novel acquisition scheme that minimized image noise and scan distortions. Applying different reconstruction algorithms to the optimized projections then enabled the extraction of atomic positions and the chemical make-up from the obtained core-shell object. From the 3D visualization, valuable conclusions about material properties and possible uses could be derived.
Plasmonics
Another application for electron tomography lies in the field of plasmonics. Light or electromagnetic radiation is coupled onto nanometer-sized structures (for instance, gold or silver). Depending on shape, size, environment and chemistry of the object, so-called surface plasmons are formed, which are resonances of the metal electrons, responding to the incoming radiation. During the Middle Ages, glass-makers unknowingly used this phenomenon when they produced colored church windows by adding tiny gold particles to the melt. A TEM offers enough spatial and spectral resolution to resolve such modes. Microscope beam electrons, running by these structures in close proximity, loose energy and this can be measured spectroscopically. If this is carried out for each tilt-angle, the full 3D energetic distribution of the modes can be reconstructed and related to theoretical calculations (published in the magazine "Nano Letters").Physical science research
Analytical electron microscopy is a versatile tool in physical science research and offers many ways to characterize exciting materials. The multitude of possibilities require considerable expenditure on equipment, expertise and intense exchange of knowledge with other scientists at an international level. Consequently, the FELMI-ZFE is embedded into an international consortium of 14 toplevel electron microscopy facilities throughout Europe, called ESTEEM, aiming to aggregate microscopy research know-how.
Kontakt
Ao.Univ.-Prof. Dipl.-Ing. Dr.techn.
Institute of Electron Microscopy and Nanoanalysis
Steyrergasse 17/III
8010 Graz, Austria
Phone:+43 316 873 8336
Fax: +43 316 108336
<link int-link-mail window for sending>gerald.kothleitner@felmi-zfe.at