TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a general introduction to field ion microscopy and its application in non-metallic materials, thin films and surface phenomena, as well as a statistical analysis of atom probe data.
Abstract: 1. Historical background and general introduction 2. Physical principles of field ion microscopy 3. FIM image interpretation and application 4. Physical principles of atom probe interpretation 5. Statistical analysis of atom probe data 6. Metallurgical applications 7. Atom probe studies of non-metallic materials, thin films and surface phenomena Epilogue: future directions
TL;DR: A data compilation technique for the generation of composition profiles in the vicinity of interfaces in a geometrically independent way is outlined, applied to quantitative determination of interfacial segregation of silver at a MgO/Cu(Ag) heterophase interface.
Abstract: The three-dimensional (3D) atom-probe technique produces a reconstruction of the elemental chemical identities and three-dimensional positions of atoms field evaporated from a sharply pointed metal specimen, with a local radius of curvature of less than 50 nm. The number of atoms collected can be on the order of one million, representing an analysis volume of approximately 20 nm x 20 nm x 200 nm (80,000 nm(3)). This large amount of data allows for the identification of microstructural features in a sample, such as grain or heterophase boundaries, if the feature density is large enough. Correlation of the measured atomic positions with these identified features results in an atom-by-atom description of the chemical environment of crystallographic defects. This article outlines a data compilation technique for the generation of composition profiles in the vicinity of interfaces in a geometrically independent way. This approach is applied to quantitative determination of interfacial segregation of silver at a MgO/Cu(Ag) heterophase interface.
TL;DR: In this article, a combined theoretical and experimental approach has been used to study nanoscale CoFe/Cu/CoFe multilayer films grown by sputter deposition, and a novel deposition technique is proposed which reduces both interfacial mixing and Fe depletion by controlling the incident adatom energies.
TL;DR: In this paper, the decomposition of an equiatomic AlCoCrCuFeNi high-entropy alloy produced by splat quenching and casting was investigated by the analytical high-resolution methods: transmission electron microscopy and three-dimensional atom probe.