Electron-beam focusing characteristics of double-gated carbon nanofiber based field emission sources

Author(s):  
X. Yang ◽  
W. L. Gardner ◽  
L. R. Baylor ◽  
H. Cui ◽  
D. H. Lowndes ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
R. Plass ◽  
L. D. Marks

With the advent of reliable cold field emission transmission electron microscopes there is substantial interest in using the amplitude and phase information recorded in electron holograms to optically or numerically correct for the coherent aberrations of transmission electron microscopes. However electron holography cannot compensate for incoherent aberrations. The derivation of the contrast transfer function for off axis electron holography in this paper shows there is no fundamental improvement in resolution for electron holography over conventional transmission electron microscopy.Evaluating the contrast transfer function involves mathematically following an electron beam through a field emission electron microscope set up for off axis electron holography. Due to the high coherence of the field emission electron beam coherent aberrations caused by the pre-specimen beam focusing system must be accounted for. Starting with a spacial frequency distribution, C(v), for the electron beam leaving the gun, the electron beam is limited by the condenser aperture and coherently aberrated by the condenser lens and objective pre-field as it passes to the specimen region:


1992 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gary W. Jones ◽  
Ching T. Sune ◽  
Susan K. Jones ◽  
Henry F. Gray

Author(s):  
Sora Park ◽  
Jin-Woo Jeong ◽  
Jae-Woo Kim ◽  
Jun-Tae Kang ◽  
Ji-Hwan Yeon ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
B.G. Frost ◽  
D.C. Joy ◽  
L.F. Allard ◽  
E. Voelkl

A wide holographic field of view (up to 15 μm in the Hitachi-HF2000) is achieved in a TEM by switching off the objective lens and imaging the sample by the first intermediate lens. Fig.1 shows the corresponding ray diagram for low magnification image plane off-axis holography. A coherent electron beam modulated by the sample in its amplitude and its phase is superimposed on a plane reference wave by a negatively biased Möllenstedt-type biprism.Our holograms are acquired utilizing a Hitachi HF-2000 field emission electron microscope at 200 kV. Essential for holography are a field emission gun and an electron biprism. At low magnification, the excitation of each lens must be appropriately adjusted by the free lens control mode of the microscope. The holograms are acquired by a 1024 by 1024 slow-scan CCD-camera and processed by the “Holoworks” software. The hologram fringes indicate positively and negatively charged areas in a sample by the direction of the fringe bending (Fig.2).


Author(s):  
Ryo Iiyoshi ◽  
Susumu Maruse ◽  
Hideo Takematsu

Point cathode electron gun with high brightness and long cathode life has been developed. In this gun, a straightened tungsten wire is used as the point cathode, and the tip is locally heated to higher temperatures by electron beam bombardment. The high brightness operation and some findings on the local heating are presented.Gun construction is shown in Fig.l. Small heater assembly (annular electron gun: 5 keV, 1 mA) is set inside the Wehnelt electrode. The heater provides a disk-shaped bombarding electron beam focusing onto the cathode tip. The cathode is the tungsten wire of 0.1 mm in diameter. The tip temperature is raised to the melting point (3,650 K) at the beam power of 5 W, without any serious problem of secondary electrons for the gun operation. Figure 2 shows the cathode after a long time operation at high temperatures, or high brightnesses. Evaporation occurs at the tip, and the tip part retains a conical shape. The cathode can be used for a long period of time. The tip apex keeps the radius of curvature of 0.4 μm at 3,000 K and 0.3 μm at 3,200 K. The gun provides the stable beam up to the brightness of 6.4×106 A/cm2sr (3,150 K) at the accelerating voltage of 50 kV. At 3.4×l06 A/cm2sr (3,040 K), the tip recedes at a slow rate (26 μm/h), so that the effect can be offset by adjusting the Wehnelt bias voltage. The tip temperature is decreased as the tip moves out from the original position, but it can be kept at constant by increasing the bombarding beam power. This way of operation is possible for 10 h. A stepwise movement of the cathode is enough for the subsequent operation. Higher brightness operations with the rapid receding rates of the tip may be improved by a continuous movement of the wire cathode during the operations. Figure 3 shows the relation between the beam brightness, the tip receding rate by evaporation (αis the half-angle of the tip cone), and the cathode life per unit length, as a function of the cathode temperature. The working life of the point cathode is greatly improved by the local heating.


2007 ◽  
Vol 472 (1) ◽  
pp. 87/[477]-94/[484]
Author(s):  
Masato Yoshikuni ◽  
Shinji Ide ◽  
Nobuyuki Iwata ◽  
Hiroshi Yamamoto

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