Orbital angular momentum in electron diffraction and its use to determine chiral crystal symmetries
Roeland Juchtmans, Jo Verbeeck

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel approach using orbital angular momentum in electron diffraction to determine chiral crystal symmetries, enabling chirality detection without extensive simulations or detailed structural data.
Contribution
The work develops an OAM-based framework for electron diffraction, providing a new method to identify crystal chirality and screw axis handedness directly from diffraction patterns.
Findings
Selection rules on OAM-coefficients reveal screw axis handedness.
The proposed method can determine chirality without detailed structural models.
Simulation results on α-quartz demonstrate the technique's effectiveness.
Abstract
In this work we present an alternative way to look at electron diffraction in a transmission electron microscope. In stead of writing the scattering amplitude in Fourier space as a set of plane waves, we use the cylindrical Fourier transform to describe the scattering amplitude in a basis of orbital angular momentum (OAM) eigenstates. We show how working in this framework can be very convenient when investigating e.g. rotation and screw axis symmetries. For the latter we find selection rules on the OAM-coefficients that unambiguously reveal the handedness of the screw axis. Detecting the OAM-coefficients of the scattering amplitude thus offers the possibility to detect the handedness of crystals without the need for dynamical simulations, the thickness of the sample nor the exact crystal structure. We propose an experimental setup to measure the OAM-components where an image of the…
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