Electron Microscopes

3 Conversations


During the formative years of quantum theory at the beginning of the 20th century, people found out that electrons can behave quite like light - a phenomenon described as wave-particle duality.1 When electrons are accelerated to high speed2 the wavelength of the electron wave becomes thousands of times smaller than the wavelength of visible light3. This was great news for people interested in improving microscopes, because the resolution of a normal optical microscope cannot be better than half the wavelength of the light used. Using electron-beams instead of light would seriously enhance the obtainable resolution.

Electron beams, being composed of fast-moving charged particles can be bent by magnetic fields, and can be focussed in a similar manner to light waves (using magnetic lenses rather than the glass lenses used for light). This was also great news for microscopy people, because they could design electron microscopes using the same blue-prints they used to design common microscopes, only replacing the lenses by magnets and using a electron-beam as a 'light' source. The first electron microscope (a TEM; see below) was built in 1931 by German engineers Max Knott and Ernst Ruska.4

General Working Mechanism

A common electron microscope looks takes the form of a tube, between 50 cm and 2 m tall, with some measuring gadgets at the bottom (and possibly the middle as well). Older microscopes also have large, insanely complex consoles with a variety of knobs, buttons, gauges, displays and suchlike. Modern electron microscopes are generally controlled by computer, and thus look much less impressive. Inside the tube is vaccum, as an electron beam cannot penetrate more than a few mm of air. At one end of the tube (normally the top) is the electron gun, which is composed of a pointed cathode and one or more anode rings5. The electron beam is generated at the cathode and accelerated by the anode(s). The voltage difference between the cathode and the final anode determines the speed of the electrons, and generally lies in the range 30 - 300 kV. The higher the voltage, the faster the electrons go and the more they penetrate into a sample6.

In the section of the tube after the electron gun are the magnets which will steer and focus the beam onto the object under investigation. Electrons may pass through the object and be detected on the other side, or they can scatter off electrons from the surface which are detected from above the sample. In the first case the electron microscope is called a transmission electron microscope, or TEM. In the second case the electron microscope is called a scanning electron microscope, or SEM.

Scanning electron microscopes: SEM

In the SEM, the electron beam is focussed down to a small spot and scanned over the surface of the object7 that is to be investigated. At the focal spot, the beam knocks out electrons from the object's surface. These scattered electrons are then detected by suitable detectors which are located inside the vacuum tube slightly above the sample. The signals from these detectors are displayed by a TV tube, or by a computer with modern instruments. The detectors can sometimes be moved to different angles, to generate different impressions of depth, which looks like shadows on the bumpy parts of the object.

As mentioned above the electron beam knocks electrons off the object's surface. This spot of the object then normally becomes ionised. If the object is made of a conducting material the charge can flow away, regenerating the surface to a neutral charge. Otherwise, if the object is made out of a non-conducting material then the charge remains at the same spot (it cannot flow away). This is a problem because the electron beam next to this spot will interact with the charge messing up the whole focussing and thus the whole image. For this reason only conducting materials or probes coated with metal films can be observed. Another problem is that the resolution is not as improved as expected for the wavelength of the electrons. This is because the interaction volume (the area where the beam knocks out the electrons from the sample) tends to spread out a bit in the bulk of the sample.

Transmission Electron Microscopes: TEM

In the transmission electron microscope (TEM) most of the electrons are not scattered from the object but pierce through, provided the object is thin enough (generally this means less than 100 nm thick, for 100 - 200 kV microscopes). The interactions of the electrons with the object allow a great deal of information to be extracted form the sample. The physical micro-structure of the material can be imaged in great detail, and spectroscopic information allows the chemical makeup of the sample to be determined. The sample preparation is complicated however8, and modern TEMs are extremely expensive.

Limitations

The most serious limitation for electron microscopy is the necessity of vacuum and metallic surfaces, meaning no living stuff can be inspected9. Another big problem, which is often swept under the rug, is the sample preparation procedure. Cells for instance are gigantic bodies for a good electron microscope, for that reason the cells must be cut in slices (by a device called a microtome), to enable the full use of the electron microscope's high resolution. The most interesting stuff one will want to observe (e.g. cell slices) is commonly made out of insulating material, and so it must be coated with conducting material first (usually by deposition from silver or gold vapor) - as one can imagine, this is an art form itself. Taking a micrograph is commonly the last and relatively easy step, good images are only obtained from well-prepared samples. The sample preparation procedure can take days of hard work.

1A effect which fortunately only becomes apparent for small particles, such as electrons.2High speed here means a significant fraction of the speed of light3The wavelength of visible light ranges from 450 nm (violet) to 800 nm (red).4Ruska was an old and (understandably) bitter man when he finally was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1986. He died three years later.5The Cathode is connected to the negative terminal of the high-voltage power supply, and the anode(s) to the positive terminal6And the faster they can fry a sample as well7This is done with magnetic coils placed at right angles to the beam. A similar arrangement is used to scan the electron beam in a cathode ray tube based TV set.8Basically, you have to slice your sample to about one-thousandth the width of a human hair, preferably without damaging the structure of the sample too much9It is actually possible to examine live samples such as bacteria in highly specialised electron microscopes. These are normally very large, rare and incredibly expensive.

Bookmark on your Personal Space


Entry

A637067

Infinite Improbability Drive

Infinite Improbability Drive

Read a random Edited Entry


Written by

Edited by

h2g2 Editors

Disclaimer

h2g2 is created by h2g2's users, who are members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of the Not Panicking Ltd. Unlike Edited Entries, Entries have not been checked by an Editor. If you consider any Entry to be in breach of the site's House Rules, please register a complaint. For any other comments, please visit the Feedback page.

Write an Entry

"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."

Write an entry
Read more