Atom probe tomography has primarily been used for atomic scale characterization of high electrical conductivity materials. A high electrical field applied to needle-shaped specimens evaporates surface atoms, and a time of flight measurement determines each atom's identity. A 2-dimensional detector determines each atom's original position on the specimen. When repeated successively over many surface monolayers, the original specimen can be reconstructed into a 3-dimensional representation. In order to have an accurate 3-D reconstruction of the original, the field required for atomic evaporation must be known a-priori. For many metallic materials, this evaporation field is well characterized, and 3-D reconstructions can be achieved with reasonable accuracy.
CITATION STYLE
Gorman, B. P., Diercks, D., Salmon, N., Stach, E., Amador, G., & Hartfield, C. (2008). Hardware and Techniques for Cross- Correlative TEM and Atom Probe Analysis. Microscopy Today, 16(4), 42–47. https://doi.org/10.1017/s1551929500059782
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