Affiliation:
1. Centre Énergie Matériaux Télécommunications, Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université du Québec , 1650 Boulevard Lionel-Boulet, Varennes, Québec J3X1P7, Canada
Abstract
A long-standing motivation driving high-speed electron microscopy development is to capture phase transformations and material dynamics in real time with high spatial and temporal resolution. Current dynamic transmission electron microscopes (DTEMs) are limited to nanosecond temporal resolution and the ability to capture only a few frames of a transient event. With the motivation to overcome these limitations, we present our progress in developing a streak-mode DTEM (SM-DTEM) and demonstrate the recovery of picosecond images with high frame sequence depth. We first demonstrate that a zero-dimensional (0D) SM-DTEM can provide temporal information on any local region of interest with a 0.37 μm diameter, a 20-GHz sampling rate, and 1200 data points in the recorded trace. We use this method to characterize the temporal profile of the photoemitted electron pulse, finding that it deviates from the incident ultraviolet laser pulse and contains an unexpected peak near its onset. Then, we demonstrate a two-dimensional (2D) SM-DTEM, which uses compressed-sensing-based tomographic imaging to recover a full spatiotemporal photoemission profile over a 1.85-μm-diameter field of view with nanoscale spatial resolution, 370-ps inter-frame interval, and 140-frame sequence depth in a 50-ns time window. Finally, a perspective is given on the instrumental modifications necessary to further develop this promising technique with the goal of decreasing the time to capture a 2D SM-DTEM dataset.
Funder
Canada Foundation for Innovation
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Canada Research Chairs
Fonds de recherche du Québec – Nature et technologies