With the recent advances made in monochromation of electron sources and Cs-correction, the point resolution of the transmission electron microscope (TEM) has been extended into the sub-Angstrom regime. This development has led to an important consequence—that specimen preparation has become a more critical issue for the materials scientist. Nanoscale artifacts that could be tolerated a few years ago when imaging in the 0.1–0.15 nm range can no longer be allowed. An example is hydrocarbon contamination, which although only a few monolayers thick, obscures the area of interest. Other examples include residual deformation and oxidation following traditional mechanical methods. Ion-based methods may induce amorphization and implantation defects, depending on the type of ion, its energy, and the particular protocol that is used.
CITATION STYLE
Cerchiara, R. R., Fischione, P. E., Liu, J., Matesa, J. M., Robins, A. C., Fraser, H. L., & Genc, A. (2011). Raising the Standard of Specimen Preparation for Aberration-Corrected TEM and STEM. Microscopy Today, 19(1), 16–19. https://doi.org/10.1017/s1551929510001197
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