English

Fast Pixelated Detectors in Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy. Part II: Post Acquisition Data Processing, Visualisation, and Structural Characterisation

Materials Science 2020-10-14 v4 Instrumentation and Detectors

Abstract

Fast pixelated detectors incorporating direct electron detection (DED) technology are increasingly being regarded as universal detectors for scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), capable of imaging under multiple modes of operation. However, several issues remain around the post acquisition processing and visualisation of the often very large multidimensional STEM datasets produced by them. We discuss these issues and present open source software libraries to enable efficient processing and visualisation of such datasets. Throughout, we provide examples of the analysis methodologies presented, utilising data from a 256×\times256 pixel Medipix3 hybrid DED detector, with a particular focus on the STEM characterisation of the structural properties of materials. These include the techniques of virtual detector imaging; higher order Laue zone analysis; nanobeam electron diffraction; and scanning precession electron diffraction. In the latter, we demonstrate nanoscale lattice parameter mapping with a fractional precision 6×104\le 6\times10^{-4} (0.06%).

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2004.02777,
  title  = {Fast Pixelated Detectors in Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy. Part II: Post Acquisition Data Processing, Visualisation, and Structural Characterisation},
  author = {Gary W. Paterson and Robert W. H. Webster and Andrew Ross and Kirsty A. Paton and Thomas A. Macgregor and Damien McGrouther and Ian MacLaren and Magnus Nord},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2004.02777},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

23 pages, 12 figures, add open data zenodo doi and revise precision discussion

R2 v1 2026-06-23T14:41:20.950Z