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Electrostatic subframing and compressive-sensing video in transmission electron microscopy.

Authors :
Reed BW
Moghadam AA
Bloom RS
Park ST
Monterrosa AM
Price PM
Barr CM
Briggs SA
Hattar K
McKeown JT
Masiel DJ
Source :
Structural dynamics (Melville, N.Y.) [Struct Dyn] 2019 Sep 23; Vol. 6 (5), pp. 054303. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Sep 23 (Print Publication: 2019).
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We present kilohertz-scale video capture rates in a transmission electron microscope, using a camera normally limited to hertz-scale acquisition. An electrostatic deflector rasters a discrete array of images over a large camera, decoupling the acquisition time per subframe from the camera readout time. Total-variation regularization allows features in overlapping subframes to be correctly placed in each frame. Moreover, the system can be operated in a compressive-sensing video mode, whereby the deflections are performed in a known pseudorandom sequence. Compressive sensing in effect performs data compression before the readout, such that the video resulting from the reconstruction can have substantially more total pixels than that were read from the camera. This allows, for example, 100 frames of video to be encoded and reconstructed using only 15 captured subframes in a single camera exposure. We demonstrate experimental tests including laser-driven melting/dewetting, sintering, and grain coarsening of nanostructured gold, with reconstructed video rates up to 10 kHz. The results exemplify the power of the technique by showing that it can be used to study the fundamentally different temporal behavior for the three different physical processes. Both sintering and coarsening exhibited self-limiting behavior, whereby the process essentially stopped even while the heating laser continued to strike the material. We attribute this to changes in laser absorption and to processes inherent to thin-film coarsening. In contrast, the dewetting proceeded at a relatively uniform rate after an initial incubation time consistent with the establishment of a steady-state temperature profile.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2329-7778
Volume :
6
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Structural dynamics (Melville, N.Y.)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31559318
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5115162