New Electron Microscope Shows Atoms in Color 110
Cornell's Duffield Hall has acquired a new electron microscope that is enabling scientists to see individual atoms in color for the very first time. While old electron microscopes can be compared to black and white cameras, this new scanning transmission electron microscope uses a new aberration-correction technology that is both more intense and allows for faster imaging speed. "The method also can show how atoms are bonded to one another in a crystal, because the bonding creates small shifts in the energy signatures. In earlier STEMs, many electrons from the beam, including those with changed energies, were scattered at wide angles by simple collisions with atoms. The new STEM includes magnetic lenses that collect emerging electrons over a wider angle. Previously, Silcox said, about 8 percent of the emerging electrons were collected, but the new detector collects about 80 percent, allowing more accurate readings of the small changes in energy levels that reveal bonding between atoms."
Not color, false color. (Score:5, Informative)
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The concept of colour doesn't really make sense at atomic scales anyway.
Re:Not color, false color. (Score:5, Informative)
The image they show is impressive when you consider that each blob of color is actually an individual atom, and that they've identified exactly what kind of atom is at each position. In this case they were using it to analyze interdiffusion of atoms at an interface. As nanotechnology becomes more and more 'real' you can imagine how useful it will be to image nano-objects with atomic resolution and elemental discrimination.
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This means that for each pixel in the image, they can determine what kind of atom is being measured. So they can generate false-color maps of atomic identity.
That's interesting. I guess this microscope will have lots of applications. At first thought - in semiconductors production, carbon allotropes and God knows where else.
Just look at the images in the article; you can clearly distinguish lanthanum from titanium, manganese, and manganese-lanthanum. From that list alone the mind boggles with potential applications.
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you can clearly distinguish lanthanum from titanium, manganese, and manganese-lanthanum
All well and good, but unfortunately these false colors need a bit more care in the selection process.
Apparently you cannot "see" the difference between Krypton and Chlorine using this process.
Which, quite frankly, can be quite fatal for some [google.com].
Re:Not color, false color. (Score:5, Informative)
Not to get too technical here, but each blob is actually a column of atoms, as the specimen is wedge-shaped and certainly more than one atomic layer thick.
Electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) has been combined with STEM imaging for several years at least, allowing similar sorts of images to be synthesized. The major contribution of this work is that they've modified the optics so that, even at 0.5 angstrom beam widths (and hence pixel sizes), they still get enough signal to the EELS detector to allow for EELS mapping and spectra acquisition for each of those pixels, giving direct bonding information about the particular portions of atoms probed by the beam. That means that the researchers can tell the difference between titanium atomic columns at different locations within the crystal, depending on the other atoms surrounding them.
Well, I suppose I did end up getting too technical.
IAATEL (I am a transmission electron microscopist)
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I was *almost* doing this in the 1990s. I could have showed you a coloured image at atomic resolution with colours based on EELS spectra, but IIRC the contrast was mainly from electron-channeling and therefore bullshit. I'm confident that these guys have eliminated such effects.
The uses of this technology in materials science will be enormous.
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davros-too wrote:
Actually, you want to be very careful about getting involved with STEM work, because almost all of it is sample preparation, which is on the order of placing samples in a solvent and staring at them until you ca
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Yes, sample prep can be a huge pain - ranging from about 1 hour on prep to one on the microscope to litterally dozens of hours prep per hour on microscope. It really depends a lot on what you're looking at.
Beam damage is the other big problem. And that is where you might fall short on something like high-Tc superconductors. IIRC (and my knowledge is well out of date) these were fairly sensitive to beam damage.
EELS is great for low-Z elements. I did most of my work on carb
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Well, I suppose I did end up getting too technical!
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Microscopy's what I do. I never said I was good at acronymization.
Though looking back at it, I feel really dumb because I don't know how I made such a blatant error, what with being capitalized and all!
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Almost. Energy-loss spectroscopy in SEMs isn't new. (And I don't think it's new in STEMs, either, AFAIK.) The innovation is in the corrective optics, as you
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I suppose you could redefine "color" (what wavelengths will this atom emit), but it's still not going to be the color we know from the macro world.
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I must have saw them coloured like that in a book early in my studies, and now I cant think of them any other way.
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Actually, it *is* real color. (Score:3, Interesting)
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size of atoms wavelength of visible light (Score:2)
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Phew, what a relief! (Score:1)
Ahh Color... (Score:2)
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After all, an atom is smaller than a wavelength of visible light, so atoms are quite literally colorless.
Schrodinger's Fridge (Score:5, Insightful)
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What would a single man use milk for? At three dollars a gallon it would be cheaper to feed them gasoline. The only time I have milk in the fridge is when there's a woman living there. And it usually turns into stinky cottage cheese before it's half empty.
Befor you ask, they're my daughter's cats. I got stuck with them when she moved to Ohio with her fiancee.
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If you're this guy [olliesbargainoutlet.com], you never have to wonder about that question. (third paragraph)
And for the record, I worked with this guy for a time.
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It is false color, but it wouldn't have to be. It's possible to probe individual atoms with visible light of different wavelengths using STMs.
Re:Schrodinger's Fridge (Score:4, Informative)
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The summary didn't say, but the colors MUST be false color, since atoms are smaller than light wavelengths. But will it allow you to photograph atoms without destroying them? (yes the link is humorous, but the question I ask is serious)
No. Nothing says that a single atom can't send or receive single photons. The size of "the EM field belonging to the photon" may be much larger, but so what?
Look here [arxiv.org] for an example.
And, Of Course... (Score:2)
Proof at last... (Score:5, Funny)
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So that is why the Hindenburg didn't use Helium.
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Too much of the red stuff and your mind starts to close, so they say.
tHE nEW sKITTLES? (Score:2)
Sorry, couldn't help myself. Marketing controls my mind. And yours.
No native CMY support? (Score:2)
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Atoms don't have color! (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Atoms don't have color! (Score:5, Funny)
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absorption spectrum [google.com] and emission spectrum [google.com]. So no atom has one unique color, but may have a series of wavelengths of light that it can emit [rochester.edu], which our sight would perceive as a mix of red, green or blue wavelengths [uc.edu],
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The energies of those orbitals have everything to do with the sizes/masses/etc of the atoms they're bound to, and the number of electrons around them.
The electrons that matter generally aren't bound to a single atom - they move in molecular orbitals around groups of atoms or larger. If you take a piece of ste
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This thread is useless without pics! (Score:1)
Re:This thread is useless without pics! (Score:5, Funny)
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Microsoft Interview (Score:2)
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B: Octarine
Correct answers they don't expect FTW!
Yow! (Score:3, Interesting)
Made in the USA (Score:2)
I lived there when I was in elementary school. More important, a certain warehouse store has its headquarters there. So I wanna know when I'll be able to pick up one of these STEMs at Costco!
Not really a breakthrough... (Score:1)
What do the electrons "reflect" off of? (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:What do the electrons "reflect" off of? (Score:5, Informative)
To a first approximation, 'heavier' atoms (higher atomic number) will scatter electrons more strongly, since they have more electrons. On an electron micrograph, heavy atoms show up as dark (absorbed/scattered alot of electrons), whereas lighter atoms show up as being bright (most electrons were transmitted).
I'm glossing over many details, of course. The important thing to remember is that the incident charged electrons are interacting with the charged electron density surrounding the atoms in the material.
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Ah, the evil remnants of a flawed basic chemistry and/or atomic physics class.
Just FYI -- not that it relates to this article -- this is wrong. So far as we know, an electron is a point particle, and the electrons in an atom aren't any different from a free electron. They are a collection of little points located at various definite positions. There's no "fuzziness" and they aren't "smeared out" in any sense at all. The "fuzzy cloud"
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I agree that electrons are point particles to the best of our knowledge. However, they are smeared out in the sense that they don't admit position eigenstates, so they are not located at definite positions. If you want to calculate a
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Next up (Score:2)
The FIRST time??? (Score:1)
Actually, I'm guessing the folks over at NION (the company who built the thing) were the first... Somebody had to test it out, right?
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Real Harmonic Color (Score:4, Interesting)
Or maybe the color should be derived from the "texture" of the atom, just like the actual color of macroscopic materials. If a carbon atom has 12 electrons evenly distributed around a sphere in shells (2, 8 and another 2 in valence), let's see it get colored accordingly. Maybe the inner shell's diameter harmonic color in the visible range, divided by 2 and scaled back into the visible, overlapped with the same algorithm for the outer 8 in the second shell, then again for the 2 in the outermost shell.
The point is that these colors can mean something. And since the number and combination of electrons is so important to the characteristics of the electron, as well as offering the femtoscopic equivalent to macroscopic colored surfaces, I'd like to finally see what I've been imagining since high school chemistry class.
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I think you have a failure of uniqueness. If you have an atom with diameter 100pm, there are about three thousand wavelengths of visible light that are integer multiples of that. Which one will you choose?
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I am saying that the false color should indeed represent the electronic structure of the atom being colored. I did make a mistake substituting the atomic weight for atomic number (and therefore nuclear
snorkfud? (Score:1)
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Screenshot (Score:5, Funny)
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There's a nice AFM technique which does this too (Score:2)
Coming to a store near you... (Score:1, Redundant)
Kirkland? Awesome, that means it should be available at Costco real soon now.
Atoms/molecules really might have colour? (Score:2)
DIY STM (Score:2)
Is it true ... (Score:2)
Sounds like (Score:1)