Introduction to Scanning Electron Microscopy @CMSE.

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Introduction to Scanning Electron Microscopy @CMSE

Transcript of Introduction to Scanning Electron Microscopy @CMSE.

Page 1: Introduction to Scanning Electron Microscopy @CMSE.

Introduction to Scanning Electron

Microscopy@CMSE

Page 2: Introduction to Scanning Electron Microscopy @CMSE.

• Scanning Electron Microscope is an instrument that investigates the surfaces of solid samples using a beam of electrons rather than light to form the image.

What is an SEM?____________________________________________________________

Page 3: Introduction to Scanning Electron Microscopy @CMSE.

• Imaging

– High depth of field

– high resolution where features can be examined at high

magnification.

• Elemental Analysis - EDS

• Structural Analysis - EBSD

• Ease of sample preparation since most SEMs only require the sample to be conductive.

Advantages of using an SEM instead of a light microscope

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• There are a number of differences between light and electron optics.

• light optics relies on the refraction or reflection of light.The wavelength of the visible light used in optical microscopes is between 400 and 700 nanometers (nm). Light microscopes are limited by the wavelength of imaging light to about 200 nanometers (0.2 microns).

• In electron optical systems, electrostatic or magnetic fields are used to influence the trajectories of beams of electrons.Scanning electron microscopy uses electrons with energies of a few thousand electron volts, imaging a thousand times greater than that of visible light (2 to 3 eV). The wavelength is 0.02 nanometers.

Advantages of using an SEM instead of a light microscope

____________________________________________________________

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• Surface topography of metals, ceramics and minerals

• Microstructural morphology of metals, ceramics and minerals

What you observed?____________________________________________________________

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• High Magnification

– Range ~ 5x to 500,000x

– Resolution down to 1nm. point-to-point

• High depth of field

– Over 100x better than optical microscope

– All specimen heights in focus simultaneously

– Best at low magnification

• High brightness guns - LaB6, FEG

• Digital Storage

• ESEM

• Low keV, high resolution

Imaging in SEM____________________________________________________________

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• High Resolution Mode: small beam, small current, optimum final aperture size after astigmatism correction, short working distance, high magnification

• High-Current Mode:High beam current, better contrast and microanalysis (more electrons and x-rays are emitted and collected), larger aperture-poorer resolution, use at low magnification under 1000x so that image blur is not noticeable

• Depth-of-Field Mode:small final aperture, long working distance, best at low magnification

• Low-Voltage Mode:increased surface sensitivity, reduced specimen charging, beam size larger than at higher kv-poorer resolution

SEM Operation Mode____________________________________________________________

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Topography (SE or GSE)• The surface features of an

object or how it looks, its texture, detectable features limited to a few manometers.

• These images give valuable information about sample's

topography

What kind of Data you get in SEM____________________________________________________________

Page 9: Introduction to Scanning Electron Microscopy @CMSE.

Morphology (BSE)• The shape, size and

arrangement of the particles making up the object that are lying on the surface of the sample or have been exposed by grinding or chemical etching, detectable features limited to several nanometers

• This image gives valuable information about sample's composition

What kind of Data you get in SEM____________________________________________________________

Dr Anthony Garratt-Reed

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Composition (EDS)• The elements and

compounds the sample is composed of and their relative ratios, in areas ~ 1 micrometer in diameter

• These X-Ray map images give valuable information

about sample's composition

What kind of Data you get in SEM____________________________________________________________

Dr Anthony Garrett-Reed

Copper

Lead

SEM image

Tin

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Crystallographic Information

(EBSD)• The arrangement of atoms in the

specimen and their degree of order; only useful on single-crystal particles >20 micrometers

• These Orientation Imaging Micrographs give valuable information about sample's crystallographic orientation

What kind of Data you get in SEM____________________________________________________________

EDAX Inc.

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SEM Instruments Available in the EM Lab:

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JEOL 5910: General-Purpose SEMPhilips FEI XL30 : FEG-ESEMJEOL 6320: High-resolution SEM

Secondary detectors (SE)Backscatter detectors (BSE)Energy-dispersive X-ray detectors (EDS)

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• Large sample chamber

• Easy to operate

• Use a tungsten filament

• Resolution down to 50 nm

JEOL 5910 General-Purpose SEM_______________________________________________________

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• Large sample chamber with CCD camera

• Use a field emission gun (FEG)

• Gaseous secondary detector (GSE) used under poor vacuum in the environmental mode

• Backscatter diffraction patterns (EBSD)

• High resolution down to 20 nm

FEI XL30 FEG-ESEM_________________________________________________________

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• Restricted sample chamber

• Use a field emission gun (FEG)

• Higher resolution down to 1.4 nm

JEOL 6320 High-resolution SEM_________________________________________________________

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• This microtome is used to obtain ultra-thin sections for electron microscopy, semi-thin and thick sections for light microscopy.

• It can be used for both ultramicrotomy at room temperature sectioning and cryo-ultramicrotomy at low temperature sectioning

MT-X Ultra microtome at Room Temperature

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Cryo-ultramicrotomy at low temperature sectioning of polymers, elastomers, or any materials requiring processing down to -185°C.

Each section of the sample can be between 5nm to 5um.

MT-X Ultra microtome cryo-ultramicrotomy at low temperature mode

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Thu Jan 24, 10-11:00am, 13-2137

The lecture will provide an introduction to the basic principles of Scanning Electron Microscopy with an approach to EDX, EBSD, and BSE.

Contact: Patrick Boisvert, 13-1018, x3-3317, [email protected]

Introduction to Scanning Electron Microscopy

Patrick Boisvert