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      Electron-beam spectroscopy for nanophotonics

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          Most cited references129

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          Plasma Losses by Fast Electrons in Thin Films

          R. Ritchie (1957)
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            Production and application of electron vortex beams.

            Vortex beams (also known as beams with a phase singularity) consist of spiralling wavefronts that give rise to angular momentum around the propagation direction. Vortex photon beams are widely used in applications such as optical tweezers to manipulate micrometre-sized particles and in micro-motors to provide angular momentum, improving channel capacity in optical and radio-wave information transfer, astrophysics and so on. Very recently, an experimental realization of vortex beams formed of electrons was demonstrated. Here we describe the creation of vortex electron beams, making use of a versatile holographic reconstruction technique in a transmission electron microscope. This technique is a reproducible method of creating vortex electron beams in a conventional electron microscope. We demonstrate how they may be used in electron energy-loss spectroscopy to detect the magnetic state of materials and describe their properties. Our results show that electron vortex beams hold promise for new applications, in particular for analysing and manipulating nanomaterials, and can be easily produced.
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              An atomic-level view of melting using femtosecond electron diffraction.

              We used 600-femtosecond electron pulses to study the structural evolution of aluminum as it underwent an ultrafast laser-induced solid-liquid phase transition. Real-time observations showed the loss of long-range order that was present in the crystalline phase and the emergence of the liquid structure where only short-range atomic correlations were present; this transition occurred in 3.5 picoseconds for thin-film aluminum with an excitation fluence of 70 millijoules per square centimeter. The sensitivity and time resolution were sufficient to capture the time-dependent pair correlation function as the system evolved from the solid to the liquid state. These observations provide an atomic-level description of the melting process, in which the dynamics are best understood as a thermal phase transition under strongly driven conditions.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nature Materials
                Nat. Mater.
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                1476-1122
                1476-4660
                July 15 2019
                Article
                10.1038/s41563-019-0409-1
                31308514
                d6a4a62f-d88b-4832-bd7c-b8ff0817a842
                © 2019

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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