Back to Search Start Over

Status and direction of atom probe analysis of frozen liquids

Authors :
Stender, Patrick
Gault, Baptiste
Schwarz, Tim M.
Woods, Eric V.
Kim, Se-Ho
Ott, Jonas
Stephenson, Leigh T.
Schmitz, Guido
Freysoldt, Christoph
Kästner, Johannes
El-Zoka, Ayman A.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Imaging of liquids and cryogenic biological materials by electron microscopy has been recently enabled by innovative approaches for specimen preparation and the fast development of optimised instruments for cryo-enabled electron microscopy (cryo-EM). Yet, Cryo-EM typically lacks advanced analytical capabilities, in particular for light elements. With the development of protocols for frozen wet specimen preparation, atom probe tomography (APT) could advantageously complement insights gained by cryo-EM. Here, we report on different approaches that have been recently proposed to enable the analysis of relatively large volumes of frozen liquids from either a flat substrate or the fractured surface of a wire. Both allowed for analysing water ice layers which are several microns thick consisting of pure water, pure heavy-water and aqueous solutions. We discuss the merits of both approaches, and prospects for further developments in this area. Preliminary results raise numerous questions, in part concerning the physics underpinning field evaporation. We discuss these aspects and lay out some of the challenges regarding the APT analysis of frozen liquids.<br />Comment: submitted for publication assocaited to the APT&M 2020 conference

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2102.01954
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1431927621013994