Sem & Tem
Sem & Tem
Sem & Tem
• What is SEM?
• Working principles of SEM
• Major components and their functions
• Electron beam - specimen interactions
• Interaction volume and escape volume
• Magnification, resolution, depth of field and image
contrast
Comparison of OM,TEM and SEM
Probe
Source of
Light source electrons
Condenser
Magnetic
lenses
Specimen
Objective
Projector Specimen
Eyepiece
CRT
Cathode Ray
Tube
detector
OM TEM SEM
25mm
radiolarian
OM SEM
Small depth of field Large depth of field
Low resolution High resolution
What is SEM
http://virtual.itg.uiuc.edu/training/EM_tutorial
Column
SEM is designed for direct studying
of the surfaces of solid objects
Sample
Chamber
The SEM has a large depth of field, which allows a large amount of the
sample to be in focus at one time and produces an image that is a good
representation of the three-dimensional sample.
The SEM also produces images of high resolution, which means that closely
features can be examined at a high magnification.
• Topography
The surface features of an object and its texture (hardness,
reflectivity… etc.)
• Morphology
The shape and size of the particles making up the object (strength,
defects in IC and chips...etc.)
• Composition
The elements and compounds that the object is composed of and the
relative amounts of them (melting point, reactivity, hardness...etc.)
• Crystallographic Information
How the grains are arranged in the object (conductivity, electrical
properties, strength...etc.)
http://virtual.itg.uiuc.edu/training/EM_tutorial
<72o
W or LaB6 Filament
Thermionic or Field Emission Gun
http://www.matter.org.uk/tem/electron_gun/electron_sources.htm
http://www.matter.org.uk/tem/electron_gun/electron_gun_simulation.htm
the filament
Filament
(5-50mm)
(5nm)
2. Other gas molecules, which could come from the sample or the
microscope itself, could form compounds and condense on the
sample. This would lower the contrast and obscure detail in the
image.
Major components and their functions
Magnetic Lenses
• Condenser lens – focusing
controls the spot size and convergence () of the electron beam which
impinges on the sample.
determines the final spot size of the electron beam, i.e., the resolution of
a SEM.
Howhttp://www.matter.org.uk/tem/lenses/electromagnetic_lenses.htm
Is Electron Beam Focused?
A magnetic lens is a solenoid designed to produce a
specific magnetic flux distribution.
Magnetic lens
(Beam diameter) (solenoid)
F = -e(v x B) p
q
Lens formula: 1/f = 1/p + 1/q
Demagnification: M = q/p
ho
f f hi
O i
I1 -Inverted
image
1
_ 1
_ 1_
Lens Formula = + f-focal length (distance)
f O i O-distance of object from
lens
Magnification m = hi = i i-distance of image from
o ho O
by objective lens
The Condenser Lens
• For a thermionic gun, the diameter of the first
cross-over point ~20-50µm
• If we want to focus the beam to a size < 10 nm on
the specimen surface, the magnification should be
~1/5000, which is not easily attained with one lens
(say, the objective lens) only.
• Therefore, condenser lenses are added to
demagnify the cross-over points.
http://www.matter.org.uk/tem/lenses/simulation_of_condenser_system.htm change of f
The Condenser
Lens
Demagnification:
M = f/L
The Objective Lens
• The objective lens
controls the final focus
of the electron beam by
changing the magnetic
field strength
• The cross-over image is
finally demagnified to an
~10nm beam spot
which carries a beam
current of approximately
10-9- 10-12 A.
The Objective Lens – Aperture
• Since the electrons
coming from the electron Electron beam
gun have spread in kinetic
energies and directions of Objective
movement, they may not lens
be focused to the same Wide Narrow
plane to form a sharp aperture aperture
spot.
• By inserting an aperture, Narrow disc
the stray electrons are Wide disc of of least
blocked and the least confusion confusion
remaining narrow beam
will come to a narrow Large beam diameter Small beam diameter
striking specimen striking specimen
Better resolution
“Disc of Least Confusion”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E85FZ7WLvao
http://www.matter.org.uk/tem/lenses/simulation_of_condenser_system.htm aperture
A Look Inside the Column
Column
Objective
lens
Sample stage
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mr9-1Sz_CK0
at~2:20-2:30
Electron Beam and Specimen Interactions
Sources of Image Information
Electron/Specimen Interactions
(1-50KeV)