| Literature DB >> 28529842 |
Daniel E Perea1, Stephan S A Gerstl2, Jackson Chin1, Blake Hirschi1, James E Evans1.
Abstract
Environmental control during transfer between instruments is required for samples sensitive to air or thermal exposure to prevent morphological or chemical changes prior to analysis. Atom probe tomography is a rapidly expanding technique for three-dimensional structural and chemical analysis, but commercial instruments remain limited to loading specimens under ambient conditions. In this study, we describe a multifunctional environmental transfer hub allowing controlled cryogenic or room-temperature transfer of specimens under atmospheric or vacuum pressure conditions between an atom probe and other instruments or reaction chambers. The utility of the environmental transfer hub is demonstrated through the acquisition of previously unavailable mass spectral analysis of an intact organic molecule made possible via controlled cryogenic transfer into the atom probe using the hub. The ability to prepare and transfer specimens in precise environments promises a means to access new science across many disciplines from untainted samples and allow downstream time-resolved in situ atom probe studies.Entities:
Keywords: Atom probe tomography; Cryo atom probe tomography; Cryogenic transfer; Environmental transfer
Year: 2017 PMID: 28529842 PMCID: PMC5413530 DOI: 10.1186/s40679-017-0045-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Struct Chem Imaging ISSN: 2198-0926
Fig. 1The ETH design and configuration. a CAD-rendered image of the ETH isolated from the local electrode atom probe (LEAP) with the various main parts as (1) main vacuum chamber hub, (2) docking port for specimen transfer shuttle (shown connected), (3) high-temperature ambient pressure reactor chamber, (4) manipulator transfer specimens between the ETH and the LEAP. b CAD-rendered view of the ETH connected to the LEAP. Arrow 1 indicates transfer of the specimen from the specimen shuttle to the ETH. Arrow 2 indicates the transfer of the specimen from the ETH to the LEAP buffer chamber. c Photograph of the ETH system connected to the LEAP at PNNL. d CAD-rendered image of the ETH main vacuum hub with the specimen shuttle docked. The shuttle transfer rod with LEAP specimen puck is extended toward a cryo-cooled puck carousel. The dashed arrows correlate with the yellow dashed arrows in (b). e–f Photographs of the environmental transfer shuttle and FIB/SEM cold stages, respectively
Fig. 2Specimen preparation and APT ToF mass spectra of MeCpPtMe3 prepared under ambient and cryogenic conditions. a Mass spectrum of MeCpPtMe3 decomposed at room temperature into Pt/a-C via IBAD and collected via (a) APT laser-pulsed mode and b APT voltage-pulsed mode. c Mass spectrum of MeCpPtMe3 decomposed at room temperature into Pt/a-C via EBAD and collected via APT-voltage-pulsed mode. d Mass spectrum collected via APT voltage-pulsed mode of MeCpPtMe3 deposited onto a Si micropost array substrate cryogenically cooled to 113 K in the FIB/SEM and environmentally transferred under high vacuum into the atom probe. e–h Zoomed in region of mass spectra showing individual isotope mass peaks of Pt
Fig. 3Mass spectral analysis of carbon and related species. Selected region of mass spectrum showing mass peaks for elemental carbon and complex carbon ions from a specimen prepared from MeCpPtMe3 at room temperature via a IBAD and b EBAD. Note the presence of Ga in (a) as it was prepared by IBAD. c The mass spectrum from a cryogenically prepared and environmentally transferred specimen of MeCpPtMe3 does not show evidence of elemental carbon or complex carbon ion mass peaks