Selected area electron diffraction data collection with Gatan counted cameras
Selected area electron diffraction (SAED) is a simple but powerful technique for determining the structure of materials in the electron microscope. Here we will describe the steps required to collect high-quality SAED data using Gatan’s K3® or Metro® cameras.
Camera setup for SAED data collection
- Reduce the beam’s intensity by changing the spot size to one of the highest numbers (smallest spot) available.
- Insert a selected area aperture.
- With the microscope in transmission electron microscopy (TEM) mode, start the camera live view and change the magnification so the SA aperture is entirely within the field of view.
- Ensure the desired sample region is located within the selected area aperture.
- Decrease the beam intensity until fewer than 250,000 e-/s (K3) or 500,000 e-/s (Metro) reach the camera. The total electron dose rate can be measured using a script published on the Gatan website or manually calculated using the built-in analysis tools in DigitalMicrograph® software.
- Switch the microscope to Diffraction mode and center the undeflected diffraction beam on the camera.
- Using the Focus knob, adjust the central bright spot to a minimum diameter while viewing the pattern on the camera. These conditions should result in saturated pixels displaying a contrast reversal of the central diffraction beam. This contrast reversal is normal.
- Set the camera length such that the desired range of reciprocal space is visible on the camera. For Metro, this camera length may be quite short.
Note: If quantification of diffraction peak intensity is desired, keeping the brightest Bragg intensities below 40 e-/pix/s (K3) or 80 e-/pix/s (Metro) is essential.
- Click Capture. Longer exposure times (10 – 100 s) will yield better signal-to-noise in high-resolution peaks.