Electron Diffraction Using Transmission Electron Microscopy

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Abstract

Electron diffraction via the transmission electron microscope is a powerful method for characterizing the structure of materials, including perfect crystals and defect structures. The advantages of electron diffraction over other methods, e.g., x-ray or neutron, arise from the extremely short wavelength (≈2 pm), the strong atomic scattering, and the ability to examine tiny volumes of matter (≈10 nm3). The NIST Materials Science and Engineering Laboratory has a history of discovery and characterization of new structures through electron diffraction, alone or in combination with other diffraction methods. This paper provides a survey of some of this work enabled through electron microscopy.

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Bendersky, L. A., & Gayle, F. W. (2001). Electron Diffraction Using Transmission Electron Microscopy. Journal of Research of the National Institute of Standards and Technology, 106(6), 997–1012. https://doi.org/10.6028/jres.106.051

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