ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Layered materials (LMs) are at the centre of an ever increasing research effort due to their potential use in a variety of applications. The presence of imperfections, such as bi- or multilayer areas, holes, grain boundaries, isotropic and anisotropic deformations, etc. are detrimental for most (opto)electronic applications. Here, we present a set-up able to transform a conventional scanning electron microscope into a tool for structural analysis of a wide range of LMs. An hybrid pixel electron detector below the sample makes it possible to record two dimensional (2d) diffraction patterns for every probe position on the sample surface (2d), in transmission mode, thus performing a 2d+2d=4d STEM (scanning transmission electron microscopy) analysis. This offers a field of view up to 2 mm2, while providing spatial resolution in the nm range, enabling the collection of statistical data on grain size, relative orientation angle, bilayer stacking, strain, etc. which can be mined through automated open-source data analysis software. We demonstrate this approach by analyzing a variety of LMs, such as mono- and multi-layer graphene, graphene oxide and MoS2, showing the ability of this method to characterize them in the tens of nm to mm scale. This wide field of view range and the resulting statistical information are key for large scale applications of LMs.
It is thought that growing large, oriented grains of perovskite can lead to more efficient devices. We study MAPbI3 films fabricated via Flash Infrared Annealing (FIRA) consisting of highly oriented, large grains. Domains observed in the SEM are ofte
Transmission electron microscopy has become a major characterisation tool with an ever increasing variety of methods being applied in wide range of scientific fields. However, the probably most famous pitfall in related workflows is the preparation o
The performance of ultra-wide band gap materials like $beta$-Ga$_mathrm{2}$O$_mathrm{3}$ is critically dependent on achieving high average electric fields within the active region of the device. In this report, we show that high-k gate dielectrics li
Ultra-wide bandgap semiconductors are ushering in the next generation of high power electronics. The correct crystal orientation can make or break successful epitaxy of such semiconductors. Here it is discovered that single-crystalline layers of $alp
Friction is a ubiquitous phenomenon that greatly affects our everyday lives and is responsible for large amounts of energy loss in industrialised societies. Layered materials such as graphene have interesting frictional properties and are often used