Nanometrology using the transmission electron microscope /
"Version: 20140901"--Title page verso."A Morgan & Claypool publication as part of IOP Concise Physics"--Title page verso.Includes bibliographical references.Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Author biography -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1. The TEM2. Imaging -- 2.1. Resolution -- 2.2. Image calibration -- 2.3. Sample orientation -- 2.4. Modes of imaging and diffraction3. Spectroscopy -- 3.1. EDX -- 3.2. EELS.The Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM) is the ultimate tool to see and measure structures on the nanoscale and to probe their elemental composition and electronic structure with sub-nanometer spatial resolution. Recent technological breakthroughs have revolutionized our understanding of materials via use of the TEM, and it promises to become a significant tool in understanding biological and bio-molecular systems such as viruses and DNA molecules. This book is a practical guide for scientists who need to use the TEM as a tool to answer questions about physical and chemical phenomena on the nanoscale.Scientists using Transmission Electron Microscopes in materials science, biology, life science, chemistry.Also available in print.Mode of access: World Wide Web.System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader.Dr. Vlad Stolojan is a Lecturer in Nanomaterials Characterisation, working in the Advanced Technology Institute as part of the Nano-Electronics Centre. He is a member of the Institute of Physics and a fellow of the Royal Microscopical Society. Dr Stolojan is an alumnus of University of East Anglia (BSc Physics, 1996) and of the University of Cambridge (PhD Physics, 2001: Nanochemistry of grain boundaries in iron). He first joined the University of Surrey's School of Engineering in 2001 as an expert in electron microscopy and energy-loss spectroscopy, continuing as an RCUK Fellow with the University of Surrey's Electronic Engineering department, in Professor Ravi Silva's group. Dr Stolojan is an author of more than 80 peer-reviewed publications, a reviewer for a number of journals (Carbon, Applied Surface Science, Ultramicroscopy, etc) and a member of the Materials Engineering and Nanotechnology Panel of the National Council for Certification of University Degrees, Romania (CNATDCU).Title from PDF title page (viewed on October 1, 2015).
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