Investigation of three-dimensional grain-boundary structures in oxides through multiple-scattering analysis of spatially resolved electron-energy-loss spectra

1998; American Physical Society; Volume: 58; Issue: 13 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1103/physrevb.58.8289

ISSN

1095-3795

Autores

Nigel D. Browning, Habib O. Moltaji, J. P. Buban,

Tópico(s)

Magnetic and transport properties of perovskites and related materials

Resumo

Grain boundaries in oxide materials such as electroceramics, ferroelectrics, and high-${T}_{c}$ superconductors are known to dominate their overall bulk properties. The critical first step in a fundamental understanding of how they control the properties of the material is a determination of the atomic structure of the boundary. While this determination has traditionally been performed by transmission-electron microscopy, the images that are generated are only a two-dimensional projection of the atomic columns in the grain-boundary core. In addition, as the images are least sensitive to light elements, such as oxygen, the complete three-dimensional boundary structure is particularly difficult to determine. Employing electron-energy-loss spectroscopy in a scanning transmission-electron microscope, it is possible to obtain an oxygen K-edge spectrum that contains information on the three-dimensional electronic structure of the boundary. Using the multiple-scattering methodology, originally developed for x-ray absorption near-edge structure, this can be directly related to the local three-dimensional atomic structure. Contained in the spectrum is therefore all of the information needed to investigate the atomic scale structure-property relationships at grain boundaries. The application of the technique is demonstrated here for the 25\ifmmode^\circ\else\textdegree\fi{} [001] symmetric tilt boundary in ${\mathrm{SrTiO}}_{3}.$

Referência(s)