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Electron probe microanalysis

Electron probe microanalysis. Low Voltage SEM Operation. Modified 9/23/10. What’s the point?. Traditionally SEMs and microprobes operate at gun voltages (E 0 ) in the range from 15-20 kV.

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Electron probe microanalysis

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  1. Electron probe microanalysis Low Voltage SEM Operation Modified 9/23/10

  2. What’s the point? Traditionally SEMs and microprobes operate at gun voltages (E0) in the range from 15-20 kV. However, it is possible to operate at a wider range of accelerating voltages: down to around 1 kV as well as up to 30 kV. There are benefits under certain conditions of operating at these different (esp. lower) voltages.

  3. “Thinking like an electron” You have seen with your Monte Carlo simulations that for a constant material, dropping the incident electron kV value will decrease the scattering of the electrons in the sample. In fact this decrease goes approximately as a 1.7 power, i.e. dropping from 15 to 1.5 kV will reduce the electron range (scatter) by 101.7 which is a factor of 50!

  4. Goldstein et al 2003 Figure 5.1 As seen in the figure SE1’s (and BSE1’s) occur immediately at the beam impact point. Of course, electrons continue to scatter within the sample and SE2’s (and BSE2’s) will emerge over a range of distances from that central point. Dropping the E0 therefore should produce better resolution electron images.

  5. There are potentially limits, however, to low voltage imaging: • Will the gun put out a “bright” enough beam at the particular lower voltage? • Is the sample surface clean? Going to lower kV means that any junk on the surface will be preferentially enhanced in the image. -- On the other hand, if what you WANT to image is the junk on the surface, lower kV is definitely called for! • SE detectors operate pretty well down to very low voltages (at or below 1 kV). • However, many BSE detectors start to become less sensitive as you drop below 10 kV. However, our Hitachi S3400 BSE detector works very well below 5 kV and even gives a weak image at 1 kV.

  6. EDS at Low Voltages In many cases, you are not just collecting images, but using EDS to qualitatively determine the composition of some phase in your sample. Operating at 15 or 20 kV gives access to K lines of elements from B to ~Se, to L lines of elements from Fe to ~Au or Pb, and M lines of most of the rest of the periodic table. However, operating at say 5 kV reduces the lines that are available for EDS examination -- and they are all crunched together, with potentially many interferences and non-unique interpretations.

  7. Interferences at Low Voltages As Newberry (2002) points out, EDS operation at low kV is fraught with difficulties, as demonstrated in his figure. If oxygen and/or carbon are present (either intentionally or not!), there are many important L and M lines that are overlapped. From Newberry 2002 Figure 6

  8. Additionally, as the surface layers become more important (that’s the region the electrons are paying more attention to), then little details like oxide skins (most metals will form some oxide layer, even gold, according to one report I’ve seen). Therefore, a single low voltage EDS spectrum can be a convolution of both the deeper material composition plus the surface skin contribution -- which makes for non-unique solutions to the question: is there trace amounts of oxygen present in this metal?

  9. Why do some say use high kV for better images? A lot of books and folks with years of experience say that higher kV gives better images. Goldstein 2003 Fig. 5.2 For example, Goldstein et al 2003, p. 197 go thru an explanation why a 30 kV image of Silicon would be sharp at 100,000 X -- for a 1 nm! resolution beam on a 1024x1024 pixel image (=1 nm pixels) the 1 nm SE1 “signal” would have a high signal/noise ratio, with the SE2 noise “being constant” and therefore presumably vanishing. Figure caption: SE1 has FWHM of 2 nm and SE2 has FWHM of ~10 um. 30 keV probe, 1 nm beam, on silicon.

  10. Why do some say use high kV for better images? Nowhere in that text can I find an explanation why this is not the case also at say 15 kV, and why 30 is better than 15 kV. However, in the JEOL booklet, they say “theoretically the electron probe diameter is smaller”. My suggestion: be empirical… try going to higher, then to lower kV, and see what you think is better…. and let me know what you decide!

  11. From “A Guide to Scanning Microscope Observation” by JEOL “When theoretically considering the electron probe diameter alone, the higher the accelerating voltage, the smaller the electron probe [at constant electron flux]. However, there are some unnegligible demerits in increasing the accelerating voltage. They are mainly as follows: 1. Lack of detailed structures of specimen surfaces 2. Remarkable edge effect 3. Higher possibility of charge-up 4. Higher possibility of specimen damage.” This suggests to me: if you want to “pass a test” with Au-spheres on graphite, 30 kV is better….but for “real” samples, maybe lower kV will produce a better image…

  12. Suggested FREE references “A Guide to Scanning Microscope Observation” by JEOL and “Invitation to the SEM World” by JEOL Are available on line as well as many other worthwhile publications from JEOL: www.jeolusa.com/RESOURCES/ElectronOptics/DocumentsDownloads/tabid/320/Default.aspx

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