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Lattice rectification in atom probe tomography: toward true three-dimensional atomic microscopy

journal contribution
posted on 2011-04-01, 00:00 authored by M P Moody, B Gault, L T Stephenson, Ross MarceauRoss Marceau, R C Powles, A V Ceguerra, A J Breen, S P Ringer
Atom probe tomography (APT) represents a significant step toward atomic resolution microscopy, analytically imaging individual atoms with highly accurate, though imperfect, chemical identity and three-dimensional (3D) positional information. Here, a technique to retrieve crystallographic information from raw APT data and restore the lattice-specific atomic configuration of the original specimen is presented. This lattice rectification technique has been applied to a pure metal, W, and then to the analysis of a multicomponent Al alloy. Significantly, the atoms are located to their true lattice sites not by an averaging, but by triangulation of each particular atom detected in the 3D atom-by-atom reconstruction. Lattice rectification of raw APT reconstruction provides unprecedented detail as to the fundamental solute hierarchy of the solid solution. Atomic clustering has been recognized as important in affecting alloy behavior, such as for the Al-1.1Cu-1.7Mg (at. %) investigated here, which exhibits a remarkable rapid hardening reaction during the early stages of aging, linked to clustering of solutes. The technique has enabled lattice-site and species-specific radial distribution functions, nearest-neighbor analyses, and short-range order parameters, and we demonstrate a characterization of solute-clustering with unmatched sensitivity and precision.

History

Journal

Microscopy and microanalysis

Volume

17

Issue

2

Pagination

226 - 239

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Location

Cambridge, Eng.

ISSN

1431-9276

eISSN

1435-8115

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Microscopy Society of America