TY - JOUR
T1 - Sculpturing the electron wave function using nanoscale phase masks
AU - Shiloh, Roy
AU - Lereah, Yossi
AU - Lilach, Yigal
AU - Arie, Ady
PY - 2014/9
Y1 - 2014/9
N2 - Electron beams are extensively used in lithography, microscopy, material studies and electronic chip inspection. Today, beams are mainly shaped using magnetic or electric forces, enabling only simple shaping tasks such as focusing or scanning. Recently, binary amplitude gratings achieved complex shapes. These, however, generate multiple diffraction orders, hence the desired shape, appearing only in one order, retains little of the beam energy. Here we demonstrate a method in electron-optics for arbitrarily shaping electron beams into a single desired shape, by precise patterning of a thin-membrane. It is conceptually similar to shaping light beams using refractive or diffractive glass elements such as lenses or holograms - rather than applying electromagnetic forces, the beam is controlled by spatially modulating its wavefront. Our method allows for nearly-maximal energy transference to the designed shape, and may avoid physical damage and charging effects that are the scorn of commonly-used (e.g. Zernike and Hilbert) phase-plates. The experimental demonstrations presented here - on-axis Hermite-Gauss and Laguerre-Gauss (vortex) beams, and computer-generated holograms - are a first example of nearly-arbitrary manipulation of electron beams. Our results herald exciting prospects for microscopic material studies, enables electron lithography with fixed sample and beam and high resolution electronic chip inspection by structured electron illumination.
AB - Electron beams are extensively used in lithography, microscopy, material studies and electronic chip inspection. Today, beams are mainly shaped using magnetic or electric forces, enabling only simple shaping tasks such as focusing or scanning. Recently, binary amplitude gratings achieved complex shapes. These, however, generate multiple diffraction orders, hence the desired shape, appearing only in one order, retains little of the beam energy. Here we demonstrate a method in electron-optics for arbitrarily shaping electron beams into a single desired shape, by precise patterning of a thin-membrane. It is conceptually similar to shaping light beams using refractive or diffractive glass elements such as lenses or holograms - rather than applying electromagnetic forces, the beam is controlled by spatially modulating its wavefront. Our method allows for nearly-maximal energy transference to the designed shape, and may avoid physical damage and charging effects that are the scorn of commonly-used (e.g. Zernike and Hilbert) phase-plates. The experimental demonstrations presented here - on-axis Hermite-Gauss and Laguerre-Gauss (vortex) beams, and computer-generated holograms - are a first example of nearly-arbitrary manipulation of electron beams. Our results herald exciting prospects for microscopic material studies, enables electron lithography with fixed sample and beam and high resolution electronic chip inspection by structured electron illumination.
KW - Beam shaping
KW - Computer-generated holograms
KW - Nanotechnology
KW - Phase-plates
KW - TEM
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84900418096&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ultramic.2014.04.007
DO - 10.1016/j.ultramic.2014.04.007
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AN - SCOPUS:84900418096
SN - 0304-3991
VL - 144
SP - 26
EP - 31
JO - Ultramicroscopy
JF - Ultramicroscopy
ER -