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Author: Professor Krishna Rajan, Director, Institute for Combinatorial Discovery, Department of Materials
Science and Engineering, Iowa State University
Corresponding author: krajan@iastate.edu
Introduction
In the world of microscopy and microanalysis of solid state nanostructures, a single atom or molecule defines the ultimate length
scale. The challenge that we face is both imaging a single atom and being able to identify its chemistry; and this has been the driving
force for the development of many techniques of microscopy and microanalysis (Figure 1). Some good examples of this, especially in
materials science, include high resolution transmission electron microscopy and scanning tunneling microscopy (and its derivative
atomic force microscopy).
Over the last thirty years, there has been a steady advancement in the development of transmission electron microscopy by fully
exploiting the physics of electron optics ranging from reducing the aberrations associated the lenses to the aberrations associated
with the electron probe itself. Due to these improvements, we can now achieve sub-angstrom resolution in atomic scale imaging of
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Figure 2. APT image of Sc clustering (red atoms) in an aluminum (blue atoms) alloy
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Mller over half a century ago and the atom probe microscope itself dates back to ca. 1968, it is only fairly recently that highly
sophisticated and reliable instruments have become commercially available. The recent commercialization of the local electrode
atom probe (LEAP) further increases the maximum number of atoms in an analysis hundreds of millions of atoms and reduces the
analysis time to minutes rather than days4-6.
Figure 3. FIM image from laser pulsed W tip showing low density of atoms near major
crystallographic orientations
Applications
Many excellent overviews of the historical evolution and applications of this technique exist 1-8. When combined with depth resolution
of one inter-planar atomic layer for depth profiling, an APT provides the highest spatial resolution of any microanalysis technique.
This capability provides a unique opportunity to study experimentally with atomic resolution, chemical clustering and 3-D distributions
of atoms. The ability to resolve such structural and chemical detail with atomic scale resolution permits one to track spatial variations
in chemistry (Figure 4)
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Figure 4. In figure (a) one can observe the lattice planes in copper running vertically. The
apparent curvature of these planes is due to instrumental distortions. Each dot is associated
with one atom. The same specimen in figure b showing the 3 dimensional distribution of copper
(orange), oxygen (red) and CuO (blue) ions associated with an ultra thin layer of oxide on the
surface of the copper. Figure (c) shows a compositional profile with sub-nanometer resolution.
The extraordinary impact of the APT as a tool in nanoscience is hence governed by its collective capability to:
image at the atomic level,
analyze chemistry at the atomic level and
gather both these classes of information in three dimensions and with spatial selectivity in the specimen with hundreds of
millions of atoms
With these capabilities, APT is rapidly being applied to address a wide array of nanoscale science problems such as dopant mapping
in semiconductors and solute clustering in complex alloys. Such fundamental studies are impacting a wide array of engineering
technologies including developments in electronic materials such as photovoltaics and data storage. The ability to spatially resolve
chemical clustering in complex alloys has important ramifications in the design of next generation of high temperature materials such
as aerospace materials.
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et.al.10, to effectively analyze biological and organic specimens using APT, several experimental parameters-such as the choice of
substrate, electric field strength, temperature, and laser pulse characteristics-must be optimized to yield mass fragments that can be
repeatably evaporated and reliably identified from the typical organic background.
Finally, it should be recognized that an atom probe is in a sense the "Hubble telescope" for materials, with the unprecedented
capacity to detect massive numbers of atoms at an extremely fast rate. This experimental capability in turn creates a computational
challenge of dealing with the data deluge afforded by massive amounts of information that needs to be processed to quantify the
image and chemistry11.
References
1. A Cerezo, P.H. Clifton, S. Lozano-Perez, P. Panayi , G.Sha and GDW Smith; Overview- Recent Progress in three dimensional
atom probe instruments and applications; Micro. Microanalyis 13 408-417 (2007)
2. MK Miller, A Cerezo, MG Hetherington, & GDW Smith, Atom Probe Field-Ion Microscopy, pp. 447-465. Oxford, UK: Oxford
University Press. (1996)
3. M.K. Miller and E.A. Kenik, Atom Probe Tomography: A Technique for Nanoscale Characterization, Microsc. Microanal., 10:336341, (2004)
4. T. F. Kelly, D. J. Larson, K. Thompson, J. D. Olson R. L. Alvis and J. H. Bunton, B. P. Gorman, Atom probe tomography of
electronic materials; Annual Review of Materials Research, 37:681-727, (2007)
5. T. F. Kelly and M. K. Miller. Invited review article: atom probe tomography. Review of Scientific Instruments, 78(03):1101 ( 2007)
6. David N. Seidman Three-Dimensional Atom-Probe Tomography: Advances and Applications Annu. Rev. Mater. Res. 2007.
37:127-58
7. M. K. Miller. Atom-probe tomography. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, New York, (2000).
8. M. K. Miller, A. Cerezo, M. G. Heatherington, and G. D. W. Smith, Atom-probe field-ion microscopy, Clarendon Press, Oxford,
(1996)
9. P.A.J. Bagot, , T Visart de Bocarme, A. Cerezo and G.D.W. Smith GDW 3D atom probe study of gas adsorption and reaction on
alloy catalyst surfaces: I- Instrumentation Surface Science 600 3028-3035 (2006)
10. Mark E. Greene, Ty J. Prosa, John A. Panitz, David J. Larson, and Thomas F. Kelly Development of Atom Probe Tomography for
Biological Materials; Microsc Microanal 15(Suppl 2), (2009) 582-583
11. S. Seal, M. Moody, A. Ceguerra, S. Ringer, K. Rajan, and S. Aluru. Tracking nanostructural evolution in alloys: Large-scale
analysis of atom probe tomography data on Blue Gene/L. In Proc. 37th International Conference on Parallel Processing (ICPP), 338345, (2008)
Copyright AZoM.com, Professor Krishna Rajan (Iowa State University)
Date Added: Feb 8, 2010 | Updated: Jun 11, 2013
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