English

Vibrational Spectroscopy at Atomic Resolution with Electron Impact Scattering

Materials Science 2020-01-08 v1

Abstract

Atomic vibrations control all thermally activated processes in materials including diffusion, heat transport, phase transformations, and surface chemistry. Recent developments in monochromated, aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) have enabled nanoscale probing of vibrational modes using a focused electron beam. However, to date, no experimental atomic resolution vibrational spectroscopy has been reported. Here we demonstrate atomic resolution by exploiting localized impact excitations of vibrational modes in materials. We show that the impact signal yields high spatial resolution in both covalent and ionic materials, and atomic resolution is available from both optical and acoustic vibrational modes. We achieve a spatial resolution of better than 2 {\AA} which is an order of magnitude improvement compared to previous work. Our approach represents an important technical advance that can be used to provide new insights into the relationship between the thermal, elastic and kinetic properties of materials and atomic structural heterogeneities.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1812.08895,
  title  = {Vibrational Spectroscopy at Atomic Resolution with Electron Impact Scattering},
  author = {Kartik Venkatraman and Barnaby D. A. Levin and Katia March and Peter Rez and Peter A. Crozier},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1812.08895},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

29 pages main text, 9 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T06:52:04.767Z