Electron microscopy has revolutionized our understanding the extraordinary intellectual demands required of the mi of materials by completing the processing-structure-prop croscopist in order to do the job properly: crystallography, erties links down to atomistic levels. It now is even possible diffraction, image contrast, inelastic scattering events, and to tailor the microstructure (and meso structure ) of materials spectroscopy. Remember, these used to be fields in them to achieve specific sets of properties; the extraordinary abili selves. Today, one has to understand the fundamentals ties of modem transmission electron microscopy-TEM of all of these areas before one can hope to tackle signifi instruments to provide almost all of the structural, phase, cant problems in materials science. TEM is a technique of and crystallographic data allow us to accomplish this feat. characterizing materials down to the atomic limits. It must Therefore, it is obvious that any curriculum in modem mate be used with care and attention, in many cases involving rials education must include suitable courses in electron mi teams of experts from different venues. The fundamentals croscopy. It is also essential that suitable texts be available are, of course, based in physics, so aspiring materials sci for the preparation of the students and researchers who must entists would be well advised to have prior exposure to, for carry out electron microscopy properly and quantitatively.
Auflage
1st ed. 1996. Corr. 6th printing
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Kluwer Academic Publishers Group
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Illustrationen
1722
1722 s/w Abbildungen
illustrations
Maße
Höhe: 27.9 cm
Breite: 21 cm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-306-45324-3 (9780306453243)
DOI
10.1007/978-1-4757-2519-3
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Basics: 1. The Transmission Electron Microscope. 2. Scattering and Diffraction. 3. Elastic Scattering. 4. Inelastic Scattering and Beam Damage. 5. Electron Sources. 6. Lenses, Apertures, and Resolution 7. How to `See' Electrons. 8. Pumps and Holders. 9. The Instrument 10. Specimen Preparation. Diffraction: 11. Diffraction Patterns. 12. Thinking in Reciprocal Space 13. Diffracted Beams. 14. Bloch Waves. 15. Dispersion Surfaces. 16. Diffraction from Crystals. 17. Diffraction from Small Volumes. 18. Indexing Diffraction Patterns. 19. Kikuchi Diffraction. 20. Obtaining CBED Patterns. 21. Using Covergent-Beam Technologies. Imaging: 22. Imaging in the TEM. 23. Thickness and Bending Effects. 24. Planar Defects. 25. Strain Fields. 26. WeakBeam Dark-Field Microscopy. 27. Phase-Contrast Images. 28. High-Resolution TEM. 29. Image Simulation. 30. Quantifying and Processing HRTEM Images. 31. Other Imaging Techniques. Spectrometry: 32. Xray Spectrometry. 33. The XEDS-TEM Interface. 34. Qualitative Xray Analysis. 35. Quantitative Xray Microanalysis. 36. Spatial Resolution and Minimum Detectability. 37. Electron EnergyLoss Spectrometers. 38. The EnergyLoss Spectrum. 39. Microanalysis with Ionization-Loss Electrons. 40. Everything Else in the Spectrum. Index.