The 4D Camera: an 87 kHz direct electron detector for scanning/transmission electron microscopy

We describe the development, operation, and application of the 4D Camera -- a 576 by 576 pixel active pixel sensor for scanning/transmission electron microscopy which operates at 87,000 Hz. The detector generates data at approximately 480 Gbit/s which is captured by dedicated receiver computers with...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2023-05
Hauptverfasser: Ercius, Peter, Johnson, Ian J, Pelz, Philipp, Savitzky, Benjamin H, Hughes, Lauren, Brown, Hamish G, Zeltmann, Steven E, Shang-Lin, Hsu, Pedroso, Cassio C S, Cohen, Bruce E, Ramamoorthy Ramesh, Paul, David, Joseph, John M, Stezelberger, Thorsten, Czarnik, Cory, Lent, Matthew, Fong, Erin, Ciston, Jim, Scott, Mary C, Ophus, Colin, Minor, Andrew M, and Peter Denes
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We describe the development, operation, and application of the 4D Camera -- a 576 by 576 pixel active pixel sensor for scanning/transmission electron microscopy which operates at 87,000 Hz. The detector generates data at approximately 480 Gbit/s which is captured by dedicated receiver computers with a parallelized software infrastructure that has been implemented to process the resulting 10 - 700 Gigabyte-sized raw datasets. The back illuminated detector provides the ability to detect single electron events at accelerating voltages from 30 - 300 keV. Through electron counting, the resulting sparse data sets are reduced in size by 10 - 300x compared to the raw data, and open-source sparsity-based processing algorithms offer rapid data analysis. The high frame rate allows for large and complex 4D-STEM experiments to be accomplished with typical STEM scanning parameters.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2305.11961