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Revealing local order via high energy EELS

  • J. L. Hart
  • , A. C. Lang
  • , Y. Li
  • , S. Shahrezaei
  • , D. D. Alix-Williams
  • , M. L. Falk
  • , S. N. Mathaudhu
  • , A. I. Frenkel
  • , M. L. Taheri
  • Johns Hopkins University
  • Drexel University
  • American Society for Engineering Education
  • Stony Brook University
  • University of California at Riverside

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Short range order (SRO) is critical in determining the performance of many important engineering materials. However, accurate characterization of SRO with high spatial resolution – which is needed for the study of individual nanoparticles and at material defects and interfaces – is often experimentally inaccessible. Here, we locally quantify SRO via scanning transmission electron microscopy with extended energy loss fine structure analysis. Specifically, we use novel instrumentation to perform electron energy loss spectroscopy out to 12 keV, accessing energies which are conventionally only possible using a synchrotron. Our data is of sufficient energy resolution and signal-to-noise ratio to perform quantitative extended fine structure analysis, which allows determination of local coordination environments. To showcase this technique, we investigate a multicomponent metallic glass nanolaminate and locally quantify the SRO with <10 nm spatial resolution; this measurement would have been impossible with conventional synchrotron or electron microscopy methods. We discuss the nature of SRO within the metallic glass phase, as well as the wider applicability of our approach for determining processing–SRO–property relationships in complex materials.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100298
JournalMaterials Today Nano
Volume21
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2023

Keywords

  • Bulk metallic glasses
  • Electron energy loss spectroscopy
  • Extended fine structure analysis
  • Short range order
  • Transmission electron microscopy

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