The present invention relates to a phase contrast electron microscope device.
An electron microscope, which is by its nature a paraxial optical system with a large focal depth, is not incompatible with a confocal method aimed at the decrease in focal depth. For this reason, the confocal microscope of Zaluzec (see U.S. Pat. No. 6,548,810 B2, “Scanning Confocal Electron Microscope”, S. P. Frigo, Z. H. Levine and N. J. Zaluzec, “Submicron Imaging of Buried Integrated Circuit Structures Using Scanning Confocal Electron Microscope”, Appl. Phys. Lett. 81 (2002) 2112-2114) is not applied to regions requiring high resolution, but only to thick materials that cannot be handled by the usual electron microscopes.
On the other hand, in the conventional phase contrast electron microscopes (Japanese Patent Applications Laid-open Nos. 2001-273866, 2002-237272, and 2003-100249 and Japanese Patent Applications Nos. 2004-351902 and 2005-321402), because a phase plate is introduced behind a sample, the trajectory of electron beam carrying the image information is disturbed and image distortions caused by electric charging or signal intensity decrease caused by electron beam loss are induced. Among these problems, the distortion of image caused by electric charging has been resolved (Japanese Application No. 2004-351902), but the decrease in signal intensity caused by electron beam is difficult to prevent.
The electron beam loss decreases signal intensity over the entire frequency range. At the low-frequency side, the increase in contrast can be realized because the decrease is compensated by the properties of phase contrast method, but the decrease in signal intensity at the high-frequency side is not compensated and leads to the decrease in resolution.
With the foregoing in view, it is an object of the present invention to provide an electron microscope device of a new phase contrast type that, by contrast with the above-described prior art, employs the merits of the confocal method, that is, the possibility of disposing a spatial filter such as an aperture or a phase plate in front of the sample, and eliminate the drawbacks of the conventional transmission phase contrast electron microscopes.
In order to solve the above-described problems, the present invention provides, firstly, an electron microscope having a confocal configuration in which a collective lens and a front objective lens on the incident side and a back objective lens and a projection lens on the outgoing side are disposed symmetrically with respect to a sample as a center, the electron microscope being configured as a lens system in which a light (hereafter light means electron optical light) source image is formed on the sample and an image observation surface, wherein a spatial filter such as an aperture or a phase plate that can be introduced and removed is inserted in the collective lens on the incident side, and a spatial filter that can be introduced and removed is inserted in the projection lens on the outgoing side.
Secondly, the electron microscope of a sample scanning type in which the light source is a point light source, a detector is a point detector, and the sample itself is scanned.
Thirdly, the electron microscope of a light flux scanning type in which the light source is a point source, a detector is a point detector, the sample is fixed, a deflecting plate is introduced in the vicinity of a back focal point of the collective lens and in the vicinity of a front focal point of the objective lens respectively, and a conjugate scanning is performed.
Fourthly, the electron microscope of a non-scanning type in which the light source is a non-interferential plane light source, a detector is a point decomposition plane detector such as a CCD camera, and the sample is fixed and observed.
Fifthly, the electron microscope which employs a confocal method in which a semicircular π phase plate or a knife edge is inserted as the spatial filter in the collective lens on the incident side, and an aperture is inserted as the spatial filter in the projection lens of the outgoing side.
Sixthly, the electron microscope which employs a confocal method in which an aperture is inserted as the spatial filter in the collective lens on the incident side, and a semicircular π phase plate or a knife edge is inserted as the spatial filter in the projection lens of the outgoing side.
Seventhly, the electron microscope which employs a confocal method in which a semicircular π phase plate or a knife edge is inserted as the spatial filter in both the collective lens on the incident side and the projection lens of the outgoing side.
Eighthly, the electron microscope wherein a front magnetic field of the objective lens forms the front objective lens.
Ninthly, the electron microscope wherein a back magnetic field of the objective lens forms the back objective lens.
Tenthly, the electron microscope having a plurality of collective lenses into which the spatial filter can be inserted.
Eleventhly, the electron microscope having a plurality of projection lenses into which the spatial filter can be inserted.
Twelfthly, the electron microscope wherein an energy filter is inserted behind the projection lens.
Thirteenthly, the electron microscope wherein a tilting stage having a tilting function is inserted as a sample stage and tomographic image reconstruction is enabled.
Fourteenthly, the electron microscope wherein a tilting sample stage that that can be temperature controlled to a high temperature is inserted as a sample stage.
Fifteenthly, the electron microscope wherein a tilting sample stage that is cooled with liquid nitrogen is inserted as a sample stage.
Sixteenthly, the electron microscope wherein a tilting sample stage that is cooled with liquid helium is inserted as a sample stage.
Seventeenthly, the electron microscope wherein a stage for performing a mechanical elongation test of the sample is inserted.
Eighteenthly, the electron microscope wherein a plane light source in which two collective lenses are combined with a diffusive scattering plate inserted between the lenses is used as a non-interferential light source of an electron beam.
Nineteenthly, the electron microscope wherein a thin film of a noble metal is used as the diffusive scattering plate.
Twenteethly, the electron microscope wherein a very small central light shielding plate is inserted as the spatial filter on the incident side and a background inelastic scattering generated from the noble metal diffusion plate is caused to extinct.
Twenty-firstly, the electron microscope wherein photoelectrons from a photoelectric plate irradiated with a laser beam are used as a non-interferential light source of an electron beam.
Twenty-secondly, the electron microscope wherein a collective minilens is disposed, switching can be performed between a confocal mode and a parallel illumination mode, and a confocal electron microscope and a transmission electron microscope can be used together.
Twenty-thirdly, the electron microscope wherein a filter stage for a phase plate that can be introduced into the collective lens and removed therefrom is mounted for a confocal mode, and a filter stage for phase plate that can be introduced and removed in a back focal plane of the objective lens system is mounted for a parallel illumination mode.
Twenty-fourthly, the electron microscope wherein the value relationship of a cut-off frequency of the phase plate and a cut-off frequency of the aperture can be freely set to optimize a combined spatial filter composed of the phase plate on the incident side and the aperture on the outgoing side.
Twenty-fifthly, the electron microscope wherein the value relationship of a cut-off frequency of the phase plate and a cut-off frequency of the aperture can be freely set to optimize a combined spatial filter composed of the aperture on the incident side and the phase plate on the outgoing side.
Twenty-sixthly, the electron microscope wherein the value relationship of cut-off frequencies of the two phase plates can be freely set to optimize a combined spatial filter composed of the phase plate on the incident side and the phase plate on the outgoing side.
In accordance with the present invention that has the above-described features, it is possible to realize not only a conventional phase contrast electron microscope in which a phase plate is disposed behind the sample (on the projection lens side), but also a phase contrast electron microscope in which a phase plate is disposed in front of the sample (on the collective lens side). As a result, composition spatial filters of various types that have heretofore been unknown can be designed and an electron microscope technology that can resolved both the problem of the phase plate being electrically charged and the problem of electron beam loss can be established.
Presently, there are three types of electron microscopes: a transmission type (TEM: Transmission Electron Microscope), a scanning type (SEM: Scanning Electron Microscope), and a scanning transmission type (STEM: Scanning Transmission Electron Microscope), and each type has its own drawbacks and advantages. On the other hand, there are also optical microscopes of equivalent types, and the performance thereof has been dramatically improved in recent years by the introduction of the confocal method. However, in the field of electron microscopes, the advantages of the confocal method could not be employed because of a paraxial optical system having a large focal depth.
Accordingly, the inventors of the present invention have conducted faithful research and development, and the results obtained clearly demonstrated that significant advantages are obtained when a confocal method is applied to a phase contrast method and led to the conception of the present invention.
Main features of the present invention are described below.
1. The resolution of the conventional method is almost doubled.
2. In the case of the phase contrast method, the phase plate can be disposed in front of the sample. Therefore, electron beam loss can be avoided and contrast can be increased without decreasing the resolution.
3. Where a semicircular π phase plate or a knife edge is used, the phase differential contrast image does not depend on the sample thickness and the application range of the phase contrast method can be expanded. A Foucault differential contrast method (K. Nagamaya, J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 73 (2004) 2725) that has been ineffective in the transmission-type phase contrast method is effectively implemented.
4. Where a semicircular π phase plate is used, the phase differential contrast image of the dark view field does not depend on the sample thickness and the application range of the phase contrast method can be expanded.
5. A halo on the image circumference that is a crucial drawback of the phase contrast method, is eliminated.
6. In the confocal method of a non-scanning type, the entire view field can be recorded at once, without scanning, and the image recording time can be dramatically shortened with respect to that of the conventional STEM.
7. Where a combination with an energy filter is employed, samples can be handled that have a thickness 100 times that at which an inelastic scattering absorption image can be observed in the usual samples for electron microscopy.
8. Image distortions resulting from defocusing are small. Therefore, image quality in the depth direction is improved over that attained when TEM or STEM is used in tomographic observations that require tilted samples.
a), (b), (c) are schematic drawings illustrating examples of the conventional electron microscope devices.
a), (b), (c) are schematic drawings illustrating examples of electron microscope devices of a sample scanning type, light flux scanning type, and non-scanning type of the present invention.
a), (b) are drawings for explaining a light conversion function in the electron microscope devices shown in
a), (b) are drawings for explaining a light conversion process in the electron microscope devices shown in
a), (b) are schematic drawings illustrating examples of the conventional electron microscope devices of an equivalent transmission phase contrast type and equivalent confocal phase contrast type.
a), (b) are schematic drawings illustrating an electron microscope device of a type with switching between a confocal mode and a parallel illumination mode of the present invention.
i) Conventional Electron Microscope
First, a conventional electron microscope will be explained using
In a TEM, as shown by way of example in
On the other hand, in a STEM, as shown by way of example in
The advantage of the confocal electron microscope of Zaluzec that is shown by way of example in
ii) Technological Requirements of Conventional Confocal Electron Microscopes
Prior to explaining the gist of the present invention, the essence of the confocal method that has been successfully employed in optical microscopes will be discussed in general terms.
The confocal method was invented by M. Minsky in 1957 (UP Patent 3013467, “Microscopy apparatus”). The trial manufacture was performed by Minsky himself, and the complete actual verification was performed by Egger et al. in the second half of 1960s (Science 1157 (1967) 305, Nature 223 (1969) 831).
There are two technologically novel main ideas in the original confocal method.
The first, as shown by way of example in
However, the original confocal method has yet another requirement shown in
The idea of Minsky who invented the confocal microscope was that the unnecessary scattered light is cut off by using the very small aperture, and optical information is taken out on only a portion in the sample where the point light source image is converged at the focal point. Namely, the idea was to decrease the focal depth and increase the positional selectivity in the depth direction. In this sense, the light receiving aperture is essential, and this aperture completely cuts off the light that comes from the outside of the focal point in the sample. As a result, three-dimensional point-selective observations with a very small background noise could be realized.
Another advantage is in that the resolution is almost doubled. An article describing a confocal optical microscope, in the strict sense of the expression, in which this advantage was proved based on the wave optics theory was published in 1970s (C. J. R. Sheppard and A. Choudhury, Optica Acta 24 (1977) 1051-1073).
iii) Confocal Electron Microscope Design of the Present Invention
A definite difference between an optical microscope and an electron microscope is in the focal depth. An electron microscope is a paraxial optical system having a very small numerical aperture of 0.01 or less, and the specific feature thereof is that the so-called focusing is performed within a range that is 100 or more times larger than the effective resolution. Thus, position selection in the depth direction cannot be performed by changing the focus as experienced in an optical microscope. This feature has been widely recognized and a combination of the confocal method and electron microscopy has not been realized for a long time because it could not employ the particular features of the confocal method.
The confocal electron microscope of Zaluzec was invented without any relation to such apprehension of the electron microscopy community, and the confocal electron microscope has no advantages over the usual electron microscopes in high-resolution applications inherent to electron microscopy. In this respect, conversely, the confocal electron microscope is effective with respect to thick samples that cannot be handled by the usual TEM, STEM due to the blurring of the entire image caused by multiple scattering, and the confocal electron microscope makes it possible to obtain an image even in thick samples, albeit with a low resolution, because the multiple electron scattering is cut off with a light receiving aperture. However, where a TEM or STEM equipped with an energy filter is used with respect to thick samples, the effect obtained is similar to that obtained in the confocal electron microscope invented by Zaluzec (multiple scattered electrons are cut off with the energy filter instead of the light receiving aperture) and, therefore, the confocal electron microscope demonstrates no special merits and has found practically no application.
The present invention has been accomplished with the foregoing in view.
a)(b)(c) illustrate confocal methods of three kinds in the present invention.
Following the basic configuration of the Zaluzec confocal method, a projection lens was introduced at the outgoing side and an insertion portion for a spatial filter was ensured. Representing it with Fourier transform (FT), which is a term of wave optics, in the case of STEM (
Taking into account a distinctive feature of the point of the point light source corresponding to a point on the light receiving plane, three systems can be considered. Namely, a sample scanning type (
In the present invention, a light receiving aperture located immediately before the light receiving plane, which is essential for the confocal method, is absent. There is no need in it. This is because the so-called focusing is performed in all the positions in the depth direction even in a thick sample (large focal depth) due to a large focal depth feature of electron microscopes, and therefore optical information from locations with different depth does not spread as a background noise over the light receiving plane. A configuration employing this advantage is of a light flux scanning type using a point decomposition plane detector such as CCD of
With the phase contrast method of the present invention, image distortion caused by defocusing can be decreased. Therefore, the advantage obtained in applications to tomographic observations that require a tilting sample is that image quality in the depth direction is improved. In this case, tomographic image reconstruction is possible where a tilting stage having a tilting function is inserted as a sample stage. A temperature-controllable tilting stage can be inserted as a sample stage according to the type of application. A high-temperature tilting stage, a tilting sample stage cooled with liquid nitrogen, or a tilting sample stage cooled with liquid helium can be used as such temperature-controllable tilting sample stage.
Further, in accordance with the present invention, a stage for performing a mechanical elongation test of the sample can be also inserted.
As one more improvement, it is clear that light scanning is also not employed. Where the light source is a plane light source, each point of the plane light source is one-to-one linked to a focal point on the plane detector. Therefore, as shown in
iv) Equivalent Electron Microscope
In order to expand the confocal electron microscopy to the phase contrast method, an electron microscope is converted to a simplified but optically equivalent electron microscope.
Where it is replaced with an equivalent collective lens on the incident side and an equivalent objective lens on the outgoing side, an equivalent TEM such as shown in
In the confocal method of the present invention that is shown in
In both equivalent electron microscopes, both the equivalent space filter on the incident side and the equivalent space filter on the outgoing side are the products of elemental space filters.
The operation of the confocal electron microscope and the operation of the phase plate will be analyzed below by using the equivalent electron microscope.
V) Extension of Confocal Electron Microscopy to Phase Contrast Method
The advantages of the confocal method are best demonstrated when it is expanded to a phase contrast electron microscope. The invention relating to the phase contrast method will be described below.
A conventional transmission phase contrast electron microscope using a phase plate as a spatial filter that has been invented by the inventors of the present invention will be first explained for the purpose of performance comparison.
In the equivalent transmission phase contrast electron microscope shown by way of example in
The positions of phase plates in both cases are thus completely inverted with respect to the sample as a center. This is the essence of the present invention. Namely, in the case of the confocal method, the phase plate can be introduced in front of the sample. Therefore, the electron beam carrying optical information about the sample is completely free from the disturbance due to phase plates. As a result, it is possible to solve a variety of problems associated with the phase contrast method, such as: a) electron beam loss caused by the phase plane; b) readjustment of the phase plate position following the charging of the sample; and c) electron beam loss and strong background noise in the Foucault differential contrast method. It goes without saying, that a design in which a phase plate is inserted behind the sample, as in the phase contrast TEM method, is also possible, and such configuration can be useful, as described hereinbelow, for certain spatial filter designs.
vi) Shape of Phase Plate for Use in Confocal Electron Microscope
Because of using a converging beam as a sample illumination light, the confocal method differs significantly from the TEM using a parallel beam. Therefore, a zero-order beam derived from the incident beam (the origin on the objective aperture) and a high-order beam derived from the light scattered by the sample cannot be distinguished. Namely, a Zernike phase plate is not used. However, the application is possible to a semicircular carbon film spatial filter used in the Hilbert differential contrast method (see the aforementioned Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 2003-100249), a Foucault knife edge used in the Foucault differential contrast method (K. Nagayama, J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 73 (2004) 2725-2731), and a loss-free phase plate (magnetic fine wire) (see the aforementioned Japanese Patent Application No. 2005-321402). The shape of these phase plates is shown in
Further,
The central light shielding plate is inherent to the non-scanning confocal method illustrated by
These various phase plates serving as spatial filters are inserted, for example, via a filter stage (not shown) that can be introduced in the collective lens or projection lens and removed therefrom. The lens aperture or central shielding plate also can be introduced and removed in a similar manner via a filter stage.
vii) Operation of Phase Plate
The operation of the phase plate in the confocal method will be described herein in comparison with the phase contrast TEM. A process of image formation with a microscope will be represented by Fourier transformation to understand better the operation of the filter containing the phase plate.
The equation representing the image formation process, that is, optical conversion, of a transmission electron microscope can be represented in the following manner by a few steps of Fourier transformation process with reference to the image formation process of the equivalent transmission electron microscope shown in
In Formula 1, a Fourier transform equation of FT[FT[H1]]=H1 (the space reversal is ignored) or FT[δ]=1 is used.
The final equation of Formula 1 shows that the image is a square of the absolute value of the convolution of the complex transmission coefficient of the sample and the Fourier transformation FT[H2] (usually called an impulse response function) of the spatial filter H2.
Further, the equation of the image formation process, that is, optical conversion, of the confocal electron microscope can be represented by the Fourier transformation process in the following manner with reference to the image formation process of the equivalent confocal electron microscope shown in
A mathematical trick is needed in the computation to derive the final form in Formula 2, and it was first derived in the heretofore published article (Sheppard & Choudhury).
A specific feature of the confocal method represented by the equations of Formula 2 is in that a spatial filter providing the impulse response function is represented by a convolution of H1 and H2 (called a combined spatial filter). The convolution does not depend on the order of H1, H2. Thus,
H1{circle around (×)}H2
and
H2{circle around (×)}H1
yield identical results. This most important feature of the confocal method is utilized by the phase contrast method.
In Formula 1, the spatial filter H1 on the incident side can be producted with the complex transmission coefficient T of the sample (T′=H1T), but in Formula 2, it acts as a Fourier filter acting upon the sample (FT[H1]T). This makes it possible to set the phase plate in front for the sample.
As a preamble for computations given by
In
A filter function demonstrated by the knife edge is equal to ½ of the sum of that of the open filter and the semicircular π filter. Therefore, the point diffraction is also the sum total of the point diffractions produced by the two filters. However, the amplitude is reduced to ½ and the intensity is reduced to ¼. This is shown in the third and sixth columns in
The semicircular π filter combined with an open filter provides a Foucault differential contrast method similar to that of the moving knife edge, but the intensity is twice that in the case of knife edge. With the knife edge, because half of the electron beam is completely shielded, the intensity is decreased, but with the π/2 filter, the entire electron beam is used and, therefore, the intensity is restored.
The advantages of the point images that are actually observed will be described below.
In the case of an open filter, in the transmission method, the functional form is (sinαk/αk)2, and in the confocal method, it is (sinαk/αk)4 (α is determined by a cut-off frequency). Because the powers are different (two and four), firstly, the line width of the point image in the confocal method is narrower than that in the transmission method. Thus, the resolution is improved by a factor close to two. Secondly, the foot portion that expands, while oscillating, beyond the first zero point determined by the inverse number of the cut-off frequency is weakened in the confocal method. Therefore, the point image has good sharpness. This feature has an important meaning with respect to the below described halo problem of the phase contrast image.
For the semicircular π filter, a square of differential images is realized, but in this case, the width of the differential image of the confocal method is half that of the transmission method. Another important aspect is that the combined spatial filter of the confocal method (see Formula 2 above) becomes zero in the point of origin (see fifth column in
The point image of the transmission method with a knife edge is composed of three components. Two of these components are identical to point images of the open filter and the semicircular π filter (the intensity is, however, ¼), but the third component is an interference term of the two. The interference term is of a differential type, as shown in the very last column of third row in
As described above, the phase contrast method of the confocal method has a number of advantages over the transmission method.
viii) Optimum Combination of Phase Plate H1 on the Incident Side and Aperture H2 on the Outgoing Side
In the example shown in
As understood from
The image contrast is determined by the components on the low-frequency side; it means that the contrast can be expected to be increased by a relative increase in the cut-off frequency of the phase plate.
Because the cut-off frequency of the combined spatial filter is a sum cut-off of frequencies on the incident side and outgoing side, where the cut-off frequency of the combined spatial filter has been set in advance, in other words, where the resolution of image has been set, what will be the allocation thereof on the incident side and outgoing side becomes a problem. In order to optimize the contract and resolution at the same time, the frequency on the incident side shown in FIG. 14III may be about twice that on the outgoing side, and in order to maximize only the contrast, the aperture on the outgoing side may be reduced as much as possible, for example, to about one tenth on the outgoing side.
However, if the aperture on the outgoing side is reduced, the information source that arises from scattered electrons is lost. In order to avoid this result, the we can employ a reduced aperture on the incident side and a phase plate on the outgoing side, where the light source must be made brighter to compensate the aperture reduction.
The results of the simulation test of the electron microscope will be described hereinbelow in greater details with the object of studying the specific features of the confocal phase contrast method.
ix) Performance Test of the Confocal Phase Contrast Method Using an Electron Microscope Simulator
A computer test of the confocal phase contrast method was performed using a simulator of an electron microscope that accurately reproduce electron microscopic experiments, and the performance of various combined spatial filters was compared.
A one-dimensional chain of a metal cluster (M13) composed of 13 metal atoms was assumed to be a sample.
In the transmission electron microscope simulation for the conventional method, the signal intensity shown in
In the confocal electron microscope simulation, when the open filters were assumed to be on the incident side and on the outgoing side (fourth stage, z=100 nm), the results obtained are practically identical to those obtained for the transmission electron microscope (uppermost row). On the other hand, in the dark field Foucault differential contrast method (fifth row) in which a semicircular π plate is inserted on the incident side, it is clear that the signal intensity is significantly weakened. This phenomenon occurs because the signal component in the vicinity of zero frequency (k=0) is inhibited to a minimum, as follows from the combined spatial filter. As a result, the advantage of the confocal method in which a filter can be disposed on the incident side was canceled by the decrease in signal intensity.
This weakness can be avoided by applying a bright field Foucault differential contrast method that restores the signal intensity in the vicinity of k=0 (see to the sixth and seventh rows). In order to restore the signal at k=0, it is possible to insert an aperture with a small cut-off frequency in either of H2 and H1, as seen in the sixth row and seventh row in
The prevention of halo that is a specific feature of the above-described differential contrast method is better understood in comparison with the transmission Hilbert differential contrast method (second row). The bright field Foucault differential contrast method and the transmission Hilbert differential contrast method are shown together by symbol a and symbol b, respectively, in the sixth row and seventh row in
As described above, even when the insertion order of filters H1, H2 is inverted, the results obtained with the combined spatial filter are the same and the image is also the same. However, in actual image forming systems, there is always a competition between the signal intensity and noise, and the discussion cannot be based on the filter shape alone. In order not to hinder the scattered electrons that are scattered from the sample and necessary to form an image, in the bright field Foucault differential contrast method, a small aperture has to be placed on the incident side and a semicircular π filter has to be placed on the outgoing side. In the case where a narrow aperture is placed on the incident side, light is attenuated, but such attenuation can be compensated by increasing the intensity of the light source. On the other hand, where a narrow aperture is placed on the outgoing side, the lost scattered electrons that are source of information cannot be recovered.
The following is clear from the simulation shown in
ix) Universal-Type Confocal Electron Microscope
A universal type in which switching between the transmission method and confocal method is possible will be explained below as another specific example of the present invention. The general outline thereof is shown in
The configuration includes a light source of a field emission gun type with good interference ability in a small-spot light source, a non-interferential plane light source generating lens system for realizing a non-scanning confocal method, a collective lens into which a phase plate holder on the incident side can be inserted, a collective minilens for switching between a transmission type and a confocal type, an objective lens in which a front magnetic field and a back magnetic field have a symmetrical design (in the confocal type, the objective lens functions as a front objective lens and back objective lens), a projection lens that creates a light source image on the light receiving plane in the confocal type and a sample image on the entire light receiving plane in the transmission type, and an energy filter inserted behind the projection lens. The optical path diagrams in
x) Specific Features and Summary of the Present Invention
As described hereinabove, specific properties of the confocal method are practically not demonstrated in the usual electron microscope configuration, but in accordance with the present invention, the confocal phase contrast method demonstrates advantages over the transmission phase contrast method. With consideration for the confocal electron microscope that realizes these advantages, a bright field Foucault differential contrast method and a dark field Foucault differential contrast method were invented. The confocal method has the following advantages over the transmission method: (1) a higher resolution, (2) complete elimination of loss of scattered electron beam from the sample; (3) reduction of sample charging effect; (4) prevention of halo inherent to the phase method; (5) absence of image distortion caused by defocusing; and (6) capability of picking up the image at once, without scanning.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2005-330374 | Nov 2005 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP2006/322680 | 11/14/2006 | WO | 00 | 5/14/2008 |