Bragg Coherent Modulation Imaging: Strain- and Defect- Sensitive Single Views of Extended Samples
A. Ulvestad, W. Cha, I. Calvo-Almazan, S. Maddali, S. M. Wild, E., Maxey, M. Duparaz, and S. O. Hruszkewycz

TL;DR
Bragg coherent modulation imaging (BCMI) is a novel technique that uses a modulator to rapidly and locally image extended samples at the nanoscale, revealing strain and defect information with improved speed.
Contribution
The paper introduces BCMI, a new method that solves the phase problem using a modulator, enabling fast, single-view imaging of extended samples with defect sensitivity.
Findings
Experimental recovery of unknown modulator structure.
Simulation shows known modulator enables single-view imaging.
Technique allows real-time strain and defect analysis in crystals.
Abstract
Nanoscale heterogeneity (including size, shape, strain, and defects) significantly impacts material properties and how they function. Bragg coherent x-ray imaging methods have emerged as a powerful tool to investigate, in three-dimensional detail, the local material response to external stimuli in reactive environments, thereby enabling explorations of the structure-defect-function relationship at the nanoscale. Although progress has been made in understanding this relationship, coherent imaging of extended samples is relatively slow (typically requiring many minutes) due to the experimental constraints required to solve the phase problem. Here, we develop Bragg coherent modulation imaging (BCMI), which uses a modulator to solve the phase problem thereby enabling fast, local imaging of an extended sample. Because a known modulator is essential to the technique, we first demonstrate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced X-ray Imaging Techniques · Advanced Electron Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Integrated Circuits and Semiconductor Failure Analysis
