the aggregate of methods in which electron microscopes are used to investigate the microstructure of objects down to the atomic or molecular level, the local composition of objects, and the microfields of objects. Microfields are electric or magnetic fields that are localized at the surfaces of objects or in microscopic volumes within objects.
In the USSR, electron microscopy also is an independent scientific discipline whose subjects and objectives include the development of new electron microscopes and microscope accessories, the improvement of existing instruments, the development of techniques for preparing specimens investigated in electron microscopes, the study of formation mechanisms of electron-optical images, and the development of methods of analyzing the various types of information—not only images—obtained by means of electron microscopes. In Soviet practice, electron microscopy also deals with the development or improvement of other particle-beam microscopes, such as the proton microscope.
The objects investigated in electron microscopy are mainly solids. The specimens studied in transmission electron microscopes (TEM’s), in which electrons with energies of 1 kiloelectron volt to 5 megaelectron volts pass through an object, include thin films, foils, and sections with a thickness ranging from 1 nanometer to 10 micrometers (µ,m), or from 10 angstroms (Å) to 105 Å. The surface and underlying structure of objects substantially thicker than 1 µm is investigated by means of nontransmission types of electron microscopes, such as scanning electron microscopes (SEM’s), electron mirror microscopes, or field-emission microscopes; field-ion microscopes may also be used for this purpose. Powders, microcrystals, aerosol particles, or other particles deposited on substrates may be studied. In TEM’s, the substrates are thin films; in SEM’s, thick substrates are used.
The surface geometrical structure of a thick object may also be studied by means of a replica, that is, an impression of the object’s surface in the form of a thin film of, for example, carbon, a colloid, or Formvar. A replica reproduces surface topography and is examined in a TEM. Before examination, a layer of a metal that strongly scatters electrons—for example, Pt—is usually deposited on the replica in a vacuum at an oblique angle, that is, at a small angle to the replica’s surface. The metal layer shadows the projections and depressions of the surface topography.
The technique of shadow casting is used to study not only the geometrical structure of surfaces but also accumulations of point defects (seeDEFECTS, CRYSTAL), stages of crystal growth, domain structure (seeDOMAINS), and microfields caused by the presence of dislocations. In shadow casting, a very thin layer of shadow-casting particles is deposited on the surface of a specimen and a replica that includes the shadow-casting particles, which are deposited mostly in areas where microfields are concentrated, is then made. The shadow-casting particles may be atoms of Au, Pt, or another element or molecules of a semiconductor or a dielectric.
The accessories of a TEM or a SEM include special small gas-filled chambers that make it possible to study liquid or gaseous specimens that are unstable in a high vacuum, for example, wet biological specimens. Since the radiation damage caused by the irradiating electron beam is fairly high, a mode of electron microscope operation that ensures a minimum radiation dosage must be carefully chosen when biological, semiconductor, polymer, or certain other types of specimens are investigated.
In addition to the investigation of static objects, which do not vary in time, electron microscopy makes it possible to study various processes in their dynamical evolution. Such processes, which are investigated in situ, include the growth of thin films, the deformation of crystals subjected to variable loads, and structural changes that result from electron or ion bombardment.
Owing to the short persistence of the electron, methods of stroboscopic electron microscopy may be used to investigate processes that are periodic in time, for example, the magnetization reversal of magnetic thin films, the reversal of polarization of ferroelectrics, or the propagation of ultrasonic waves. In such methods, an electron beam illuminates a specimen by means of pulses that are in synchronism with the voltage pulses supplied to the specimen. The synchronism ensures that a specific phase of a process is recorded on the microscope display in exactly the same way as in conventional optical stroboscopic instruments. In principle, the ultimate time resolution in stroboscopic electron microscopy is about 10–15 sec for a TEM. In practice, a resolution of ~10–10 sec is obtained for both the TEM and the SEM.
Amorphous solids and other solids whose particles are smaller than the resolvable distance for an electron microscope diffusely scatter electrons. To interpret the images of such solids, very simple methods of amplitude electron microscopy are used. For example, in a TEM, the image contrast—that is, the difference in image brightness between adjacent regions of an object—is, in the first approximation, proportional to the difference in thickness between the regions.
The scattering of particles by crystalline solids having regular structures gives rise to the diffraction of the particles. Methods of phase-contrast electron microscopy are used to compute the image contrast for such solids and to solve the inverse problem, that is, to calculate the structure of an object from an observed image. Phase-contrast electron microscopy entails the solution of the problem of electron wave diffraction (seeDE BROGUE WAVES) by a crystal lattice. In solving the problem, inelastic interactions of electrons and an object are also taken into account; such interactions include scattering by plasmons and scattering by phonons.
In high-resolution TEM’s and scanning transmission electron microscopes (STEM’s), images of individual molecules or atoms of heavy elements are obtained. By using the methods of phase-contrast electron microscopy, the three-dimensional structure of crystals or of biological macromolecules is reconstructed from images. In particular, holographic methods are used to solve such problems, and the calculations are performed by means of computers.
A variety of phase-contrast electron microscopy is interference electron microscopy, which is analogous to optical interferometry (seeINTERFEROMETER). In this case, the electron beam is split by means of electron prisms. The specimen, which alters the phase of the electron wave passing through it, is placed in one of the arms of an interferometer. The method may be used to measure, for example, the intrinsic electric potential of a specimen.
In Lorentz electron microscopy, phenomena caused by the Lorentz force are studied. The method is used to investigate either intrinsic magnetic and electric fields or externally applied scattering fields. The fields examined include the fields of magnetic domains in thin films, the fields of ferroelectric domains (seeDOMAINS), and the fields of magnetic read/write heads.
The composition of objects is investigated by microdiffraction methods, that is, by electron diffraction analysis of local areas of an object, by electron probe microanalysis (seeSPECTROCHEMICAL ANALYSIS, X-RAY), or by cathodoluminescence microanalysis (seeCATHODE LUMINESCENCE). Either a characteristic X-ray spectrum or cathodoluminescence is excited when a specimen is irradiated by a finely focused electron beam, or an electron probe; the probe diameter is less than 1 u.m. In electron probe microanalysis, characteristic X-ray spectra are recorded. In cathodoluminescence microanalysis, the cathodoluminescence is detected. Microdiffraction methods are also used to study the energy spectra of secondary electrons, which are emitted from the surface or the bulk of a specimen as a result of bombardment by the primary electron beam.
Much work is being done on the development of methods of quantitative electron microscopy. Such methods entail the precise measurement of various parameters of a specimen or of a process being investigated. Examples include the measurement of local electric potentials, local magnetic fields, and the microgeometry of surface topography.
Electron microscopes are also used for industrial purposes, for example, to fabricate microcircuits by means of photolithography.
N. A. STAROSVETSKAIA and IA. IU. KOMISSARCHIK