Transmission Kikuchi Diffraction Mapping Induces Structural Damage in Atom Probe Specimens

Author:

Gault Baptiste12ORCID,Khanchandani Heena1ORCID,Prithiv Thoudden Sukumar1ORCID,Antonov Stoichko13ORCID,Britton T Ben4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microstructure Physics and Alloy Design, Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung , Max-Planck-Str. 1, Düsseldorf 40237 , Germany

2. Department of Materials, Royal School of Mines, Imperial College , Prince Consort Road, SW7 2BP London , UK

3. National Energy Technology Laboratory , 1450 Queen Ave. SW, Albany, 97321 OR , USA

4. Department of Materials Engineering, University of British Columbia , Frank Forward Building, Stores Road 309-6350, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z4

Abstract

AbstractMeasuring local chemistry of specific crystallographic features by atom probe tomography (APT) is facilitated by using transmission Kikuchi diffraction (TKD) to help position them sufficiently close to the apex of the needle-shaped specimen. However, possible structural damage associated to the energetic electrons used to perform TKD is rarely considered and is hence not well-understood. Here, in two case studies, we evidence damage in APT specimens from TKD mapping. First, we analyze a solid solution, metastable β-Ti-12Mo alloy, in which the Mo is expected to be homogenously distributed. Following TKD, APT reveals a planar segregation of Mo among other elements. Second, specimens were prepared near Σ3 twin boundaries in a high manganese twinning-induced plasticity steel, and subsequently charged with deuterium gas. Beyond a similar planar segregation, voids containing a high concentration of deuterium, i.e., bubbles, are detected in the specimen on which TKD was performed. Both examples showcase damage from TKD mapping leading to artefacts in the distribution of solutes. We propose that the structural damage is created by surface species, including H and C, subjected to recoil from incoming energetic electrons during mapping, thereby getting implanted and causing cascades of structural damage in the sample.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Instrumentation

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