|
| ![]() | |||
|
| Successful Installation |
| New TEM Enables View of | Downloads and Links | ||
| Unique, high-performance electron microscope from | RTF Documents Further Information | ||
| BONN/Germany, OBERKOCHEN/Germany, 11.04.2007. A unique transmission electron microscope (TEM) for the imaging and analysis of materials with atomic resolution has now been successfully installed at the caesar Institute in Bonn. The CRISP (= Corrected Illumination Scanning TEM Probe) system from the Nano Technology Systems Division of Dr. Stephan Irsen, responsible for electron microscopy at the caesar Institute, was highly satisfied at the successful acceptance of the CRISP microscope: “The instrument features outstanding imaging and spectroscopic possibilities and provides our researchers and partners with images of atomic structures during scanning operation and a spectroscopic characterization of the atomic specimen structures at the highest level." Dr. Dirk Stenkamp, Member of the Board at Details of the technology A special CRISP application in addition to the established projection imaging of the specimen structure is the possibility of scanning the object with an atomic-sized electron probe and scanning an image of the specimen using the specimen signal generated in the process (scanning TEM). In doing so, the special corrector in the CRISP illumination system leads to an improvement of the spatial resolution down to atomic resolution, i.e. it is possible to image atoms at a distance of less than one ten millionth of a millimeter A monochromator, which reduces the energy width of the electron beam from its original 800meV to 150meV, has been added to the technological highlights of the CRISP. This reduces chromatic aberrations in the image and permits the sustained increase of the spectroscopic resolution of the microscope. Furthermore, this enables energy resolution during the chemical element analysis using electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS/ELNS) that could only be achieved in the past with synchrotron radiation. ![]() One of the initiators of CRISP, Prof. Dr. Eckhard Quandt (Center) who is now at the Christian Albrechts University in Kiel, Dr. Markus Dilger, Managing Director of the Nano Technology Systems Division at Markus Wiederspahn Public Relations Carl Zeiss SMT AG Phone: +49 7364 20-2194 Fax: +49 7364 20-9206 E-Mail: Number: 035/07 SE Number of Words: 550 Number of Characters: 4144 |
|
|