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In this work, we emphasize the important contribution of the 2s Bloch wave state to the properties of a STEM electron probe propagating on an atomic column. For a strong enough column potential, the confinement of the 2s state leads to a long-period oscillation of the electron wave function, which is reflected in the resulting STEM-HAADF intensity. We show how this influences STEM composition quantification even at large thicknesses. We found additionally that the excitation of the 2s state affects the intensity of alloys where long-range order phenomena are present, which in turn provides a way to probe the degree of order in alloys.
Atomically resolved electron energy-loss spectroscopy experiments are commonplace in modern aberrationcorrected transmission electron microscopes. Energy resolution has also been increasing steadily with the continuous improvement of electron monochr
We investigate the effect of short-range order (SRO) on the electronic structure in alloys from the theoretical point of view using density of states (DOS) data. In particular, the interaction between the atoms at different lattice sites is affected
Experimental spectra from medium energy ion scattering were compared to Monte-Carlo simulations (employing the TRBS code) to obtain information on the scattering potential. The impact of uncertainties in the interatomic potential on quantification of
The effects of the tilt of the crystallographic orientation with respect to an incident electron probe on high-angle annular dark field (HAADF) imaging in aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) have been investigated wi
Controlled excitation of materials can transiently induce changed or novel properties with many fundamental and technological implications. Especially, the concept of Floquet engineering, manipulation of the electronic structure via dressing with ext