Convergent and divergent beam electron holography and reconstruction of adsorbates on free-standing two-dimensional crystals
Tatiana Latychevskaia, Colin Robert Woods, Yi Bo Wang, Matthew, Holwill, Eric Prestat, Sarah J. Haigh, Kostya S. Novoselov

TL;DR
This paper explores the use of convergent and divergent beam electron holography in CBED to reconstruct adsorbates and atomic arrangements on 2D crystals, achieving high-resolution imaging through simulated and experimental data.
Contribution
It demonstrates that individual CBED spots can be treated as in-line holograms for reconstructing sample features, including adsorbates and atomic positions, with high resolution.
Findings
Adsorbates show strong contrast in CBED spots.
Reconstruction resolution can reach 2.13 Å in simulations.
Experimental CBED patterns achieve 2.7 Å resolution.
Abstract
Van der Waals heterostructures have been lately intensively studied because they offer a large variety of properties that can be controlled by selecting 2D materials and their sequence in the stack. The exact arrangement of the layers as well as the exact arrangement of the atoms within the layers, both are important for the properties of the resulting device. Recently it has been demonstrated that convergent beam electron diffraction (CBED) allows quantitative three-dimensional mapping of atomic positions in three-dimensional materials from a single CBED pattern. In this study we investigate CBED in more detail by simulating and performing various CBED regimes, with convergent and divergent wavefronts, on a somewhat simplified system: a 2D monolayer crystal. In CBED, each CBED spot is in fact an in-line hologram of the sample, where in-line holography is known to exhibit high intensity…
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