This is actually rather important. A electron beam vortex is
produced but it is also been tightly managed allowing incredible
precision.
The real bottom line is that this precision and scale allows us to
envisage the manipulation of single molecules themselves. This
appears to be the tool able to do just that.
Thus this work has now truly begun.
Electron
Microscopes With a Twist
by Staff Writers
Vienna, Austria (SPX) Nov 07, 2012
Nowadays, electronmicroscopes
are an essential tool, especially in the field of materials science.
At TU Vienna, electron beams are being created that possess an
inner rotation, similarly to a tornado. These "vortex beams"
cannot only be used to display objects, but to investigate
material-specific properties - with precision on a nanometer scale. A
new breakthrough in research now allows scientists to produce
much more intense vortex beams than ever before.
In a tornado, the
individual air particles do not necessarily rotate on their own axis,
but the air suction overall creates a powerful rotation. The rotating
electron beams that have been generated at TU Vienna behave in a very
similar manner.
Quantum Tornado: the
Electron as a Wave
In order to understand them, we should not think of electrons simply as minuscule points or pellets, as in that case they could at most rotate on their own axis. Vortex beams, on the other hand, can only be explained in terms of quantum physics: the electrons behave like a wave, and this quantum wave can rotate like a tornado or a water current behind a ship's propeller.
"After the vortex
beam gains angular momentum, it can also transfer this angular
momentum to the object that it encounters", explained Prof.
Peter Schattschneider from the Institute of Solid State Physics at TU
Vienna.
The angular momentum
of the electrons in a solid object is closely linked to its magnetic
properties. For materials science it is therefore a huge advantage to
be able to make statements regarding angular momentum conditions
based on these new electron beams.
Beams Rotate - With
Masks and Screens
Peter Schattschneider and Michael Stoger-Pollach (USTEM, TU Vienna) have been working together with a research group from Antwerp on creating the most intense, clean and controllable vortex beams possible in a transmission electron microscope.
The first successes
were achieved two years ago: at the time, the electron beam was shot
through a minuscule grid mask, whereby it split into three partial
beams: one turning right, one turning left and one beam that did not
rotate.
Now, a new, much more
powerful method has been developed: researchers use a screen, half of
which is covered by a layer of silicon nitride. This layer is so thin
that the electrons can penetrate it with hardly any absorption,
however they can be suitably phase-shifted. "After focusing
using a specially adapted astigmatic lens, an individual vortex beam
is obtained", explained Michael Stoger-Pollach.
This beam is more
intense by one order of magnitude than the vortex beams that we have
been able to create to date.
"Firstly, we do
not split the beam into three parts, as is the case with a grid mask,
but rather, the entire electron stream is set into rotation.
Secondly, the grid mask had the disadvantage of blocking half of the
electrons - the new special screen does not do this", said
Stoger-Pollach.
Thanks to the new
technology, right and left-rotating beams can now be distinguished in
a reliable manner - previously this was only possible with
difficulty. If we now add a predetermined angular momentum to each
right and left-rotating beam, the rotation of one beam is increased,
while the rotation of the other beam decreases.
Electron microscopes
with a twist
This new technology was briefly presented by the research team in the "Physical Review Letters" journal. In future, the aim is to apply the method in materials science.
Magnetic properties
are often the focus of attention, particularly in the case of newly
developed designer materials. "A transmission electron
microscope with vortex beams would allow us to investigate these
properties with nanometric precision", explained Peter
Schattschneider.
More exotic
applications of vortex beams are also conceivable: in principle,
it is possible to set all kinds of objects in rotation - even
individual molecules - using these beams, which possess angular
momentum. Vortex beams could therefore also open new doors in
nanotechnology.
No comments:
Post a Comment