Jannis D, Hofer C, Gao C, Xie X, Béché A, Pennycook T J, Verbeeck J
EMAT, University of Antwerp, Groenenborgerlaan 171, 2020 Antwerp, Belgium; NANOlab Center of Excellence, University of Antwerp, Groenenborgerlaan 171, 2020 Antwerp, Belgium.
EMAT, University of Antwerp, Groenenborgerlaan 171, 2020 Antwerp, Belgium; NANOlab Center of Excellence, University of Antwerp, Groenenborgerlaan 171, 2020 Antwerp, Belgium.
Ultramicroscopy. 2022 Mar;233:113423. doi: 10.1016/j.ultramic.2021.113423. Epub 2021 Nov 13.
Four dimensional scanning transmission electron microscopy (4D STEM) records the scattering of electrons in a material in great detail. The benefits offered by 4D STEM are substantial, with the wealth of data it provides facilitating for instance high precision, high electron dose efficiency phase imaging via centre of mass or ptychography based analysis. However the requirement for a 2D image of the scattering to be recorded at each probe position has long placed a severe bottleneck on the speed at which 4D STEM can be performed. Recent advances in camera technology have greatly reduced this bottleneck, with the detection efficiency of direct electron detectors being especially well suited to the technique. However even the fastest frame driven pixelated detectors still significantly limit the scan speed which can be used in 4D STEM, making the resulting data susceptible to drift and hampering its use for low dose beam sensitive applications. Here we report the development of the use of an event driven Timepix3 direct electron camera that allows us to overcome this bottleneck and achieve 4D STEM dwell times down to 100 ns; orders of magnitude faster than what has been possible with frame based readout. We characterize the detector for different acceleration voltages and show that the method is especially well suited for low dose imaging and promises rich datasets without compromising dwell time when compared to conventional STEM imaging.
四维扫描透射电子显微镜(4D STEM)能够非常详细地记录材料中电子的散射情况。4D STEM带来的益处十分显著,它所提供的大量数据有助于例如通过质心或基于叠层成像术的分析实现高精度、高电子剂量效率的相位成像。然而,长期以来,在每个探针位置记录散射的二维图像的要求严重限制了4D STEM的执行速度。相机技术的最新进展已大大减少了这一瓶颈,直接电子探测器的检测效率尤其适合该技术。然而,即使是最快的帧驱动像素探测器仍会显著限制4D STEM中可使用的扫描速度,使得所得数据容易产生漂移,并妨碍其在低剂量束敏感应用中的使用。在此,我们报告了一种事件驱动的Timepix3直接电子相机的应用开发,它使我们能够克服这一瓶颈,并实现低至100纳秒的4D STEM驻留时间;比基于帧读出的速度快几个数量级。我们对不同加速电压下的探测器进行了表征,并表明与传统STEM成像相比,该方法特别适合低剂量成像,且有望在不影响驻留时间的情况下获得丰富的数据集。