Electron Microscopy Techniques
Electron Microscopy Techniques
Electron Microscopy Techniques
Introduction
Electron Microscopes are scientific
instruments that use a beam of highly
energetic electrons to examine objects on a
very fine scale.
The main advantage of Electron
Microscopy is the unusual short wavelength
of the electron beams, substituted for light
energy.
The wavelengths of about 0.005 nm
increases the resolving power of the
instrument to fractions
1
Topography
• The surface features of an object or "how it looks", its texture;
direct relation between these features and materials properties
(hardness, reflectivity...etc.)
Morphology
• The shape and size of the particles making up the object; direct
relation between these structures and materials properties
(ductility, strength, reactivity...etc.)
Composition
• The elements and compounds that the object is composed of
and the relative amounts of them; direct relationship between
composition and materials properties (melting point, reactivity,
hardness...etc.)
• Crystallographic Information. How the atoms are arranged in
the object; direct relation between these arrangements and
materials properties (conductivity, electrical properties,
strength...etc.)
2
Types
There are two main electron microscopy techniques:
3
What is SEM
Column
SEM is designed for
direct studying of the
surfaces of solid objects Sample
Chamber
•Vacuum pump 4
minutes
•Turn on filament
current &
accelerating voltage
•Fiddle with the
knobs
Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM)
Working Concept
TEM works much like a slide projector.
A projector shines a beam of light through (transmits) the slide, as
the light passes through it is affected by the structures and objects
on the slide.
These effects result in only certain parts of the light beam being
transmitted through certain parts of the slide.
TEMs work the same way except that they shine a beam of
electrons (like the light) through the specimen (like the slide).
13
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
Optical Microscopy (OM ) vs
Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM)
m
radiolarian
OM SEM
Small depth of field Large depth of field
Low resolution High resolution
Advantages of Using SEM over OM
Magnification Depth of Field Resolution
OM 4x – 1000x 15.5m – 0.19m ~ 0.2m
SEM 10x – 3000000x 4mm – 0.4m 1-10nm
• 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.)
A Look Inside the Column
Column
A more detailed look inside
<72o
- beam convergence
How an Electron Beam is Produced?
Filament
(5-50m)
(5nm)