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Quantitative annular dark field scanning transmission electron microscopy for nanoparticle atom-counting: What are the limits?

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Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation A De Backer et al 2015 J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 644 012034 DOI 10.1088/1742-6596/644/1/012034

1742-6596/644/1/012034

Abstract

Quantitative atomic resolution annular dark field scanning transmission electron microscopy (ADF STEM) has become a powerful technique for nanoparticle atom-counting. However, a lot of nanoparticles provide a severe characterisation challenge because of their limited size and beam sensitivity. Therefore, quantitative ADF STEM may greatly benefit from statistical detection theory in order to optimise the instrumental microscope settings such that the incoming electron dose can be kept as low as possible whilst still retaining single-atom precision. The principles of detection theory are used to quantify the probability of error for atom-counting. This enables us to decide between different image performance measures and to optimise the experimental detector settings for atom-counting in ADF STEM in an objective manner. To demonstrate this, ADF STEM imaging of an industrial catalyst has been conducted using the near-optimal detector settings. For this experiment, we discussed the limits for atomcounting diagnosed by combining a thorough statistical method and detailed image simulations.

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10.1088/1742-6596/644/1/012034