English

Sub-nanometer depth resolution and single dopant visualization achieved by tilt-coupled multislice electron ptychography

Materials Science 2025-07-28 v1 Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics

Abstract

Real-space imaging of three-dimensional atomic structures is a critical yet challenging task in materials science. Although scanning transmission electron microscopy has achieved sub-angstrom lateral resolution through techniques like electron ptychography1,2, depth resolution remains limited to only 2 to 3 nanometers with a single projection setup3,4. Attaining better depth resolution typically necessitates large sample tilt angles and many projections, as seen in atomic electron tomography5,6. Here, we develop a new algorithm based on multislice electron ptychography which couples only a few projections at small tilt angles, but is sufficient to improve the depth resolution by more than threefold to the sub-nanometer scale, and potentially to the atomic level. This technique maintains high resolving power for both light and heavy atoms, and significantly improves the visibility of single dopants. We are thus able to experimentally detect dilute substitutional praseodymium dopants in a brownmillerite oxide, Ca2Co2O5, in three dimensions and observe the accompanying lattice distortion. This technique requires only a moderate level of data acquisition or processing, and can be seamlessly integrated into electron microscopes equipped with conventional components.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2406.04252,
  title  = {Sub-nanometer depth resolution and single dopant visualization achieved by tilt-coupled multislice electron ptychography},
  author = {Zehao Dong and Yang Zhang and Chun-Chien Chiu and Sicheng Lu and Jianbing Zhang and Yu-Chen Liu and Suya Liu and Jan-Chi Yang and Pu Yu and Yayu Wang and Zhen Chen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2406.04252},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

27 pages, 5 figures, 10 supplementary figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T16:56:10.937Z