• Müller, J.; Heyl, M.; Schultz, T.; Elsner, K.; Schloz, M.; Rühl, S.; Seiler, H.; Koch, N.; List-Kratochvil, E.J.W.; Koch, C.T.: Probing Crystallinity and Grain Structure of 2D Materials and 2D-Like Van der Waals Heterostructures by Low-Voltage Electron Diffraction. Physica Status Solidi A 221 (2024), p. 2300148/1-11

10.1002/PSSA.202300148
Open Access Version

Abstract:
4D scanning transmission electron microscopy (4D-STEM) is a powerful method for characterizing electron-transparent samples with down to sub-Ångstrom spatial resolution. 4D-STEM can reveal local crystallinity, orientation, grain size, strain, and many more sample properties by rastering a convergent electron beam over a sample area and acquiring a transmission diffraction pattern (DP) at each scan position. These patterns are rich in information about the atomic structure of the probed volume, making this technique a potent tool to characterize even inhomogeneous samples. 4D-STEM can also be used in scanning electron microscopes (SEMs) by placing an electron-sensitive camera below the sample. 4D-STEM-in-SEMs is ideally suited to characterize 2D materials and 2D-like van der Waals heterostructures (vdWH) due to their inherent thickness of a few nanometers. The lower accelerating voltage of SEMs leads to strong scattering even from monolayers. The large field of view and down to sub-nm spatial resolution of SEMs are ideal to map properties of the different constituents of 2D-like vdWH by probing their combined sample volume. A unique 4D-STEM-in-SEM system is applied to reveal the single crystallinity of MoS2 exfoliated with gold-mediation as well as the crystal orientation and coverage of both components of a C60/MoS2 vdWH are determined.