moreSTEM

About

Momentum-resolved STEM has a large potential for the mapping of piezoelectric and spontaneous, as well as ferroelectric polarisations as a prerequisite to fundamentally understand and develop devices in the field of future information technology.

Research Topics

  • Multidimensional electron microscopy
  • Structure & chemistry in solid-state nanostructures & 2D materials
  • Electrical characterization
  • High-contrast low-dose imaging of soft and biological matter
  • Development and application of new imaging techniques
  • Simulation of electron scattering, Density functional theory, Artificial Intelligence

Contact

Prof. Dr. Knut Müller-Caspary

ER-C-1

Building 05.2w / Room 3077

+49 2461/61-85237

E-Mail

moreSTEM
In this imaging mode diffraction patterns are recorded at each raster position of a scanning electron beam in an electron microscope.

In this imaging mode diffraction patterns are recorded at each raster position of a scanning electron beam in an electron microscope. The result is a unique multidimensional data set that allows for the simultaneous evaluation and combination of real- and momentum space information.

Applications of momentum-resolved STEM cover a broad spectrum: Combined with aberration-corrected electron optics, subatomic electric fields and charge densities can be measured down to a spatial resolution of 50pm in thin specimen. The access to the detailed angular distribution of scattered intensity opens new possibilities to optimise contrast dedicated to analyse distinct specimen properties independently, such as chemical composition, strain state, or specimen thickness. For soft matter, and biological specimen in particular, the ability to generate and optimise faint contrast in low-dose images in software after acquisition provides a high degree of flexibility and dose-efficiency. Momentum-resolved STEM has furthermore a large potential for the mapping of piezoelectric and spontaneous, as well as ferroelectric polarisations as a prerequisite to fundamentally understand and develop devices in the field of future information technology.

Within an international network spanning from Nebraska (USA) over the RWTH Aachen University to Bangalore (India), the moreSTEM group at Forschungszentrum Jülich focuses on three main methodological and materials science challenges.

  • CHARGE AND TRANSPORT IN 2D MATERIALS
  • FERROELECTRIC MATERIALS
  • 1D NANOSTRUCTURES

Members

Projects
  • Momentum resolved STEM
  • Charge and transport in 2D materials
  • Ferroelectric materials
  • 1D nanostructures
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Publications
Last Modified: 11.11.2022