Scanning electron microscope Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
head]]The scanning electron microscope (SEM) is a type of electron microscope capable of producing high resolution images of a sample surface. Due to the manner in which the image is created, SEM images have a characteristic 3-dimensional quality and are useful for judging the surface structure of the sample.
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2 Detection of secondary electrons 3 Detection of back-scattered electrons 4 Resolution of the SEM 5 Gallery of SEM images |
In a typical SEM configuration, electrons are thermionically emitted from a tungsten or LaB6 cathode filament towards an anode. The electron beam, which typically has an energy ranging from a few keV to 50 keV, is focused by two successive condenser lenses into a beam with a very fine spot size (~ 5nm). The beam then passes through the objective lens, where pairs of scanning coils deflect the beam either linearly or in a raster fashion over a rectangular area of the sample surface. As the primary electrons strike the surface they are inelastically scattereded by atoms in the sample. Through these scattering events, the primary beam effectively spreads and fills a teardrop-shaped volume extending about 1 μm into the surface. Interactions in this region lead to the subsequent emission of electrons and x-rays, which are then detected to produce an image.
The most common imaging mode monitors low energy (<50 eV) secondary electrons. Due to their low energy, these electrons must originate within a few tenths of a nanometer from the surface. The electrons are detected by a scintillator-photomultiplier device and the resulting signal used to modulate the intensity of a CRT that is rastered in conjunction with the raster-scanned primary beam. Because the secondary electrons come from the near surface region, the brightness of the signal depends on the surface area that is exposed to the primary beam. This surface area is relatively small for a flat surface, but increases for steep surfaces. Thus steep surface and edges (cliffs) tend to be brighter than flat surfaces resulting in images with good three-dimensional contrast. Using this technique, resolutions of the order of 5 nm are possible.
In addition to the secondary electrons, backscattered electrons (essentially elastically scattered primary electrons) can also be detected. Backscattered electrons may be used to detect both topological and compositional detail, although due to their much higher energy (approximately the same as the primary beam) these electrons may be scattered from fairly deep within the sample. This results in less topological contrast than for the case of secondary electrons. However, the probability of backscattering is a weak function of atomic number, thus some contrast between areas with different chemical compositions can be observed especially when the average atomic number of the different regions is quite different.
The spatial resolution of the SEM depends on the size of the electron spot which in turn depends on the magnetic electron-optical system which produces the scanning beam. The resolution is also limited by the size of the interaction volume, or the extent of material which interacts with the electron beam. The spot size and the interaction volume are both very large compared to the distances between atoms, so the resolution of the SEM is not high enough to image down to the atomic scale, as is possible in the transmission electron microscope. The SEM has compensating advantages, though, including the ability to image a comparatively large area of the specimen; the ability to image bulk materials (not just thin films or foils); and the variety of analytical modes available for measuring the composition and nature of the specimen. In general, SEM images are much more easy to interpret than TEM images, and many SEM images are actually beautiful, quite apart from their scientific value.
The Wikipedia illustrates various topics with SEM images. Click on an image to see which pages use it.
This is an Article on Scanning electron microscope. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Scanning electron microscope Scanning process
Detection of secondary electrons
Detection of back-scattered electrons
Resolution of the SEM
Gallery of SEM images
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