Author:
Hellman Olof C.,Vandenbroucke Justin A.,Rüsing Järg,Isheim Dieter,Seidman David N.
Abstract
Abstract
The three-dimensional (3D) atom-probe technique produces a
reconstruction of the elemental chemical identities and three-dimensional
positions of atoms field evaporated from a sharply pointed metal specimen,
with a local radius of curvature of less than 50 nm. The number of atoms
collected can be on the order of one million, representing an analysis
volume of approximately 20 nm × 20 nm × 200 nm (80,000
nm3). This large amount of data allows for the
identification of microstructural features in a sample, such as grain or
heterophase boundaries, if the feature density is large enough. Correlation
of the measured atomic positions with these identified features results in
an atom-by-atom description of the chemical environment of crystallographic
defects. This article outlines a data compilation technique for the
generation of composition profiles in the vicinity of interfaces in a
geometrically independent way. This approach is applied to quantitative
determination of interfacial segregation of silver at a MgO/Cu(Ag)
heterophase interface.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
720 articles.
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