Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy in a low energy electron microscope
Abstract
Energy-Dispersive X-Ray Spectroscopy (EDS) is a technique frequently used in Scanning and Transmission Electron Microscopes to study the elemental composition of a sample. Briefly, high energy electrons of the incident electron beam may ionize an electron from a core shell. The decay of this excited state may result in the emission of a characteristic X-ray photon or Auger-Meitner electron. A solid-state EDS detector captures the X-ray photon and determines its energy. The energy spectrum thus contains information on the elemental make-up of the sample. Low Energy Electron Microscopy (LEEM) typically utilizes incident electrons with energies in the range 0–100 eV, insufficient for the generation of elemental X-rays. In general, LEEM does therefore not allow for elemental characterization of the sample under study. Here we show how relatively simple modifications and additions to the LEEM instrument make in-situ EDS spectroscopy possible, and how high-quality EDS spectra can be obtained, thus enabling elemental analysis in LEEM instruments for the first time.