Direct observation and simulations of atomically resolved low loss images in graphene

ORAL

Abstract

Aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) at low voltages provides atomic-resolution imaging of many two-dimensional materials, such as pristine graphene, using core-loss and low-loss spectra. Traditionally, EELS-STEM imaging and density functional theory (DFT) simulations were carried out by two different communities with minimal overlap. One community includes diffraction but ignores solid-state effects in the spectra, while the other includes solid-state effects but leaves out diffraction and interference. Recent work has combined DFT calculations and dynamical scattering to allow the simulation of probe position dependent core-loss spectra. In this talk we describe extension of this work to calculations of STEM images based on low-loss spectroscopy. It is usually assumed that such signals are highly delocalized, since plasmons represent a collective excitation. Considering that not all low-loss excitations are plasmonic in nature, we examine the role of interband transitions in the formation of atomic resolution low-loss images. We compare experimental results that show atomic resolution lattice images of graphene based on low-loss signals with simulations of images based on low-loss scattering potentials.

Authors

  • Myron Kapetanakis

    Vanderbilt University \& Oak Ridge National Laboratory

  • Mark Oxley

    Vanderbilt University \& Oak Ridge National Laboratory

  • Juan-Carlos Idrobo

    Vanderbilt University \& Oak Ridge National Laboratory

  • Wu Zhou

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Lab, Oak Ridge, TN

  • Stephen Pennycook

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Soktrates T. Pantelides

    Department of Physics and Astronomy, Vanderbilt University, Vanderbilt University, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Vanderbilt University \& Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Vanderbilt Univ., Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Vanderbilt Univ