The field of the invention is the field of scanning electron beam microscopes
In a scanning electron microscope (SEM), a focused electron beam is scanned across the surface of a specimen. Electrons emitted from the region of the surface struck by the electron beam are detected, typically by a solid state diode or by a scintillator or phosphor that is optically coupled to a photomultiplier, and the current generated by the detected electrons determines the current of a beam of electrons in a cathode ray tube (CRT). As the focused electron beam is scanned over the surface, an image is built up on the CRT. SEM's are well known in the art and well described, for example, in numerous publications, starting with D. McMullan entitled “An improved scanning electron microscope for opaque specimens.” published in Proc. IEE vol. 100 Pt. 11, 245–259 (1953).
The faster electrons are called backscattered electrons (BSE) and the image formed is called a BSE image.
It is an object of the invention to produce a method of simultaneously recording scanning electron microscope images of an area of a surface.
The image contrasts that are shown in a BSE image in the SEM will depend on the tilt angle of the specimen, the incident beam energy, the energy sensitivity of the BSE detector, the position of the BSE detector relative to the sample and the incident electron beam and other factors.
The apparatus of the invention is shown in
Electron imaging devices 16 required for the method of the invention are shown in plan view in
The method of the invention comprises:
The method of the invention requires that at least two images are acquired as the electron beam 10 scans across the surface 12 of the specimen 14. For example, detector element 20 intercepts electrons which have a small angle θ2 with respect to the normal 11, and detector element 22 intercepts electrons which have a large angle θ3 with respect to the normal 11. The signal from each of the detector elements 20 and 22 is used to built separate images of the surface 12.
Strong topographic contrasts can be obtained when using a BSE detector with a low takeoff angle, or a large angle θ3 with respect to the normal 11.
In the prior art, the collection solid angle of the BSE detector is changed by physically moving either a single detector or by the use of more than one detector. With the apparatus and method of the invention, however, the signals from the various regions of device 16 may be combined together to give images which emphasize features of importance, and the images may all be taken in the same scan of the electron beam over the surface 12 of the specimen. The ability to choose exactly which of the large plurality of detectors to use, or which combination of detectors, allows much more freedom to maximize signals, or emphasize features, than the prior art methods of SEM investigation. In addition, all the signals from all the detector elements may be recorded digitally or in analogue form, and images from a single scan of the surface can be reconstructed at a later time to construct the best images for the requirements.
Prior art BSE detectors having large pluralities of detector elements have been developed to record electron backscattering patterns (EBSP) from a single-crystal region of the sampleas shown by L. Reimer entitled: “Scanning Electron Microscopy, Physics of Image Formation and Microanalysis.” published by Springer-Verlag (Springer Series in Optical Sciences vol. 45) (1985) pp 338–341 and 356–361. Reimer points out that the probability of a Rutherford wide-angle scattering event at an atom in a single crystal is modulated by the incoming and outgoing channeling conditions and this gives rise to both the electron channeling pattern (ECP) for a rocking incident electron beam (EB); and to the EBSP in the emerging scattered electrons with a stationary incident EB. These are related by the reciprocity principle. EBSP are typically recorded using an array of very small BSE detectors that correspond to the pixels in the recorded pattern. The image recorded on the multielement BSE detector is a series of lines, called Kikuchi patterns, corresponding to the electrons which escape the crystal in channels. The surface of the specimen is not, however, imaged in this prior art.
Images of a polycrystalline surfaces showing poly crystalline contrast have been derived from a large number of such images of Kikuchi lines. These images, however, result from very computer intensive pattern recognition of the Kikuchi pattern orientation, and the time taken to record such an image is greater than the recording of images from the partitioned detectors of the present invention.
In the case of a transmission electron image from a typically thinned specimen, the imaging device of the invention 16 is mounted below the specimen 60 as is shown in
Obviously, many modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5592563 | Zahavi | Jan 1997 | A |
6844550 | Yin et al. | Jan 2005 | B1 |
20050017173 | Kumar | Jan 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060169894 A1 | Aug 2006 | US |