分光计
光学
电子光谱仪
电子能量损失谱
材料科学
电子
电子显微镜
物理
扫描透射电子显微镜
能量色散X射线光谱学
探测器
镜头(地质)
光谱学
常规透射电子显微镜
原子物理学
电子光谱学
环境扫描电子显微镜
能量过滤透射电子显微镜
电子束诱导沉积
反射高能电子衍射
扫描电子显微镜
阴极射线
电子衍射
核物理学
量子力学
透射电子显微镜
作者
R.F. Egerton,Dale E. Newbury
出处
期刊:Physics Today
[AIP Publishing]
日期:1987-11-01
卷期号:40 (11): 94-95
被引量:3436
摘要
1. An Introduction to Electron Energy-Loss Spectroscopy.- 1.1 Interaction of Fast Electrons with a Solid.- 1.2. The Electron Energy-Loss Spectrum.- 1.3. The Development of Experimental Techniques.- 1.4. Comparison of Analytical Methods.- 1.4.1. Ion-Beam Methods.- 1.4.2. Incident Photons.- 1.4.3. Electron-Beam Techniques.- 1.5. Further Reading.- 2. Instrumentation for Energy-Loss Spectroscopy.- 2.1. Energy-Analyzing and Energy-Selecting Systems.- 2.1.1. The Magnetic-Prism Spectrometer.- 2.1.2. Energy-Selecting Magnetic-Prism Devices.- 2.1.3. The Wien Filter.- 2.1.4. Cylindrical-Lens Analyzers.- 2.1.5. Retarding-Field Analyzers.- 2.1.6. Electron Monochromators.- 2.2. The Magnetic-Prism Spectrometer.- 2.2.1. First-Order Properties.- 2.2.2. Higher-Order Focusing.- 2.2.3. Design of an Aberration-Corrected Spectrometer.- 2.2.4. Practical Considerations.- 2.2.5. Alignment and Adjustment of the Spectrometer.- 2.3. The Use of Prespectrometer Lenses.- 2.3.1. Basic Principles.- 2.3.2. CTEM with Projector Lens On.- 2.3.3. CTEM with Projector Lens Off.- 2.3.4. Spectrometer-Specimen Coupling in a High-Resolution STEM.- 2.4. Recording the Energy-Loss Spectrum.- 2.4.1. Serial Acquisition.- 2.4.2. Electron Detectors for Serial Recording.- 2.4.3. Scanning the Energy-Loss Spectrum.- 2.4.4. Signal Processing and Storage.- 2.4.5. Noise Performance of a Serial Detector.- 2.4.6. Parallel-Recording Detectors.- 2.4.7. Direct Exposure of a Diode-Array Detector.- 2.4.8. Indirect Exposure of a Diode Array.- 2.4.9. Removal of Diode-Array Artifacts.- 2.5. Energy-Filtered Imaging.- 2.5.1. Elemental Mapping.- 2.5.2. Z-Contrast Imaging.- 3. Electron Scattering Theory.- 3.1. Elastic Scattering.- 3.1.1. General Formulas.- 3.1.2. Atomic Models.- 3.1.3. Diffraction Effects.- 3.1.4. Electron Channeling.- 3.1.5. Phonon Scattering.- 3.2. Inelastic Scattering.- 3.2.1. Atomic Models.- 3.2.2. Bethe Theory.- 3.2.3. Dielectric Formulation.- 3.2.4. Solid-State Effects.- 3.3. Excitation of Outer-Shell Electrons.- 3.3.1. Volume Plasmons.- 3.3.2. Single-Electron Excitation.- 3.3.3. Excitons.- 3.3.4. Radiation Losses.- 3.3.5. Surface Plasmons.- 3.3.6. Single, Plural, and Multiple Scattering.- 3.4. Inner-Shell Excitation.- 3.4.1. Generalized Oscillator Strength.- 3.4.2. Kinematics of Scattering.- 3.4.3. Ionization Cross Sections.- 3.5. The Spectral Background to Inner-Shell Edges.- 3.6. The Structure of Inner-Shell Edges.- 3.6.1. Basic Edge Shapes.- 3.6.2. Chemical Shifts in Threshold Energy.- 3.6.3. Near-Edge Fine Structure (ELNES).- 3.6.4. Extended Energy-Loss Fine Structure (EXELFS).- 4. Quantitative Analysis of the Energy-Loss Spectrum.- 4.1. Removal of Plural Scattering from the Low-Loss Region.- 4.1.1. Fourier-Log Deconvolution.- 4.1.2. Approximate Methods.- 4.1.3. Angular-Dependent Deconvolution.- 4.2. Kramers-Kronig Analysis.- 4.3. Removal of Plural Scattering from Inner-Shell Edges.- 4.3.1. Fourier-Log Deconvolution.- 4.3.2. Fourier-Ratio Method.- 4.3.3. Van Cittert'1. An Introduction to Electron Energy-Loss Spectroscopy.- 1.1 Interaction of Fast Electrons with a Solid.- 1.2. The Electron Energy-Loss Spectrum.- 1.3. The Development of Experimental Techniques.- 1.4. Comparison of Analytical Methods.- 1.4.1. Ion-Beam Methods.- 1.4.2. Incident Photons.- 1.4.3. Electron-Beam Techniques.- 1.5. Further Reading.- 2. Instrumentation for Energy-Loss Spectroscopy.- 2.1. Energy-Analyzing and Energy-Selecting Systems.- 2.1.1. The Magnetic-Prism Spectrometer.- 2.1.2. Energy-Selecting Magnetic-Prism Devices.- 2.1.3. The Wien Filter.- 2.1.4. Cylindrical-Lens Analyzers.- 2.1.5. Retarding-Field Analyzers.- 2.1.6. Electron Monochromators.- 2.2. The Magnetic-Prism Spectrometer.- 2.2.1. First-Order Properties.- 2.2.2. Higher-Order Focusing.- 2.2.3. Design of an Aberration-Corrected Spectrometer.- 2.2.4. Practical Considerations.- 2.2.5. Alignment and Adjustment of the Spectrometer.- 2.3. The Use of Prespectrometer Lenses.- 2.3.1. Basic Principles.- 2.3.2. CTEM with Projector Lens On.- 2.3.3. CTEM with Projector Lens Off.- 2.3.4. Spectrometer-Specimen Coupling in a High-Resolution STEM.- 2.4. Recording the Energy-Loss Spectrum.- 2.4.1. Serial Acquisition.- 2.4.2. Electron Detectors for Serial Recording.- 2.4.3. Scanning the Energy-Loss Spectrum.- 2.4.4. Signal Processing and Storage.- 2.4.5. Noise Performance of a Serial Detector.- 2.4.6. Parallel-Recording Detectors.- 2.4.7. Direct Exposure of a Diode-Array Detector.- 2.4.8. Indirect Exposure of a Diode Array.- 2.4.9. Removal of Diode-Array Artifacts.- 2.5. Energy-Filtered Imaging.- 2.5.1. Elemental Mapping.- 2.5.2. Z-Contrast Imaging.- 3. Electron Scattering Theory.- 3.1. Elastic Scattering.- 3.1.1. General Formulas.- 3.1.2. Atomic Models.- 3.1.3. Diffraction Effects.- 3.1.4. Electron Channeling.- 3.1.5. Phonon Scattering.- 3.2. Inelastic Scattering.- 3.2.1. Atomic Models.- 3.2.2. Bethe Theory.- 3.2.3. Dielectric Formulation.- 3.2.4. Solid-State Effects.- 3.3. Excitation of Outer-Shell Electrons.- 3.3.1. Volume Plasmons.- 3.3.2. Single-Electron Excitation.- 3.3.3. Excitons.- 3.3.4. Radiation Losses.- 3.3.5. Surface Plasmons.- 3.3.6. Single, Plural, and Multiple Scattering.- 3.4. Inner-Shell Excitation.- 3.4.1. Generalized Oscillator Strength.- 3.4.2. Kinematics of Scattering.- 3.4.3. Ionization Cross Sections.- 3.5. The Spectral Background to Inner-Shell Edges.- 3.6. The Structure of Inner-Shell Edges.- 3.6.1. Basic Edge Shapes.- 3.6.2. Chemical Shifts in Threshold Energy.- 3.6.3. Near-Edge Fine Structure (ELNES).- 3.6.4. Extended Energy-Loss Fine Structure (EXELFS).- 4. Quantitative Analysis of the Energy-Loss Spectrum.- 4.1. Removal of Plural Scattering from the Low-Loss Region.- 4.1.1. Fourier-Log Deconvolution.- 4.1.2. Approximate Methods.- 4.1.3. Angular-Dependent Deconvolution.- 4.2. Kramers-Kronig Analysis.- 4.3. Removal of Plural Scattering from Inner-Shell Edges.- 4.3.1. Fourier-Log Deconvolution.- 4.3.2. Fourier-Ratio Method.- 4.3.3. Van Cittert's Method.- 4.3.4. Effect of a Collection Aperture.- 4.4. Background Fitting to Ionization Edges.- 4.4.1. Energy Dependence of the Background.- 4.4.2. Background-Fitting Procedures.- 4.4.3. Background-Subtraction Errors.- 4.5. Elemental Analysis Using Inner-Shell Edges.- 4.5.1. Basic Formulas.- 4.5.2. Correction for Incident-Beam Convergence.- 4.5.3. Effect of Sample Orientation.- 4.5.4. Effect of Specimen Thickness.- 4.5.5. Choice of Collection Angle.- 4.5.6. Choice of Integration and Fitting Regions.- 4.5.7. Microanalysis Software.- 4.5.8. Calculation of Partial Cross Sections.- 4.6. Analysis of Extended Energy-Loss Fine Structure.- 4.6.1. Spectrum Acquisition.- 4.6.2. Fourier-Transform Method of Data Analysis.- 4.6.3. Curve-Fitting Procedure.- 5. Applications of Energy-Loss Spectroscopy.- 5.1. Measurement of Specimen Thickness.- 5.1.1. Measurement of Absolute Thickness.- 5.1.2. Sum-Rule Methods.- 5.2. Low-Loss Spectroscopy.- 5.2.1. Phase Identification.- 5.2.2. Measurement of Alloy Composition.- 5.2.3. Detection of Hydrogen and Helium.- 5.2.4. Zero-Loss Images.- 5.2.5. Z-contrast Images.- 5.2.6. Plasmon-Loss Images.- 5.3. Core-Loss Microanalysis.- 5.3.1. Choice of Specimen Thickness and Incident Energy.- 5.3.2. Specimen Preparation.- 5.3.3. Elemental Detection and Mapping.- 5.3.4. Quantitative Microanalysis.- 5.3.5. Measurement and Control of Radiation Damage.- 5.4. Spatial Resolution and Elemental Detection Limits.- 5.4.1. Electron-Optical Considerations.- 5.4.2. Loss of Resolution due to Electron Scattering.- 5.4.3. Statistical Limitations.- 5.4.4. Localization of Inelastic Scattering.- 5.5. Structural Information from EELS.- 5.5.1. Low-Loss Fine Structure.- 5.5.2. Orientation Dependence of Core-Loss Edges.- 5.5.3. Core-Loss Diffraction Patterns.- 5.5.4. Near-Edge Fine Structure.- 5.5.5. Extended Fine Structure.- 5.5.6. Electron-Compton Measurements.- Appendix A. Relativistic Bethe Theory.- Appendix B. FORTRAN Programs.- B.3. Incident-Convergence Correction.- B.4. Fourier-Log Deconvolution.- B.5. Kramers-Kronig Transformation.- Appendix C. Plasmon Energies of Some Elements and Compounds.- Appendix D. Inner-Shell Binding Energies and Edge Shapes.- Appendix E. Electron Wavelengths and Relativistic Factors Fundamental Constants.- References.
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