Shot noise-mitigated secondary electron imaging with ion count-aided microscopy
Date Issued
2024-07-30Publisher Version
10.1073/pnas.2401246121Author(s)
Agarwal, Akshay
Kasaei, Leila
He, Xinglin
Kitichotkul, Ruangrawee
Hitit, Oğuz Kağan
Peng, Minxu
Schultz, J. Albert
Feldman, Leonard C.
Goyal, Vivek K.
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Show full item recordPermanent Link
https://hdl.handle.net/2144/49428Version
Published version
Citation (published version)
A. Agarwal, L. Kasaei, X. He, R. Kitichotkul, O.K. Hitit, M. Peng, J.A. Schultz, L.C. Feldman, V.K. Goyal. 2024. "Shot noise-mitigated secondary electron imaging with ion count-aided microscopy." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of USA, Volume 121, Issue 31, pp.e2401246121-. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2401246121Abstract
Modern science is dependent on imaging on the nanoscale, often achieved through processes that detect secondary electrons created by a highly focused incident charged particle beam. Multiple types of measurement noise limit the ultimate trade-off between the image quality and the incident particle dose, which can preclude useful imaging of dose-sensitive samples. Existing methods to improve image quality do not fundamentally mitigate the noise sources. Furthermore, barriers to assigning a physically meaningful scale make the images qualitative. Here, we introduce ion count-aided microscopy (ICAM), which is a quantitative imaging technique that uses statistically principled estimation of the secondary electron yield. With a readily implemented change in data collection, ICAM substantially reduces source shot noise. In helium ion microscopy, we demonstrate 3[Formula: see text] dose reduction and a good match between these empirical results and theoretical performance predictions. ICAM facilitates imaging of fragile samples and may make imaging with heavier particles more attractive.
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