Mapping Structural Heterogeneity at the Nanoscale with Scanning Nano-structure Electron Microscopy (SNEM)
Yevgeny Rakita, James L. Hart, Partha Pratim Das, Daniel L. Foley,, Stavros Nicolopoulos, Sina Shahrezaei, Suveen Nigel Mathaudhu, Mitra L., Taheri, Simon J. L. Billinge

TL;DR
This paper introduces SNEM, a novel method combining scanning electron diffraction and machine learning to map local nanoscale structure and chemical ordering in complex materials with high spatial resolution.
Contribution
The study develops and demonstrates SNEM, a new approach that enables rapid, spatially resolved analysis of nanoscale structure and chemistry without energy filters, advancing 4D-STEM techniques.
Findings
Successful mapping of local chemical composition and ordering.
Validation of chemical maps with EELS.
SNEM provides rapid, high-resolution structural insights.
Abstract
Here we explore the use of scanning electron diffraction coupled with electron atomic pair distribution function analysis (ePDF) to understand the local order as a function of position in a complex multicomponent system, a hot rolled, Ni-encapsulated, ZrCuNiAl bulk metallic glass (BMG), with a spatial resolution of 3 nm. We show that it is possible to gain insight into the chemistry and chemical clustering/ordering tendency in different regions of the sample, including in the vicinity of nano-scale crystallites that are identified from virtual dark field images and in heavily deformed regions at the edge of the BMG. In addition to simpler analysis, unsupervised machine learning was used to extract partial PDFs from the material, modeled as a quasi-binary alloy, and map them in space. These maps allowed key insights not only into the local average…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTheoretical and Computational Physics · X-ray Spectroscopy and Fluorescence Analysis
