Claude Bile said:
Wait, what?
First of all, why ressurect a year-old thread?
Second, you do know that 0.25 A = 25 pm right? In which case we agree (sort of)?
Claude.
I just ran across this thread, interesting stuff. Sorry to "resurrect" it yet again, just interested in the discussion and its new to me.
Seems like the best resolution those ALIS guys are getting is .24 nm, not .25 angstroms as quoted above. So really its not yet pure pico world since that is 240 pm but you can say its bordering into that world. Now the wavelength of helium atoms is a lot smaller than electrons for a given energy so theoretically yes there should be some amazing resolution improvement, but I think it comes down to what kind of spot size they are able to focus it down to, and that is probably the issue.
By way of contrast, the best TEM resolution in the world seems to be from FEI Titan microscopes, their data sheets say that they have a resolution of 80 pm, so a lot better than 240 pm, considering x and y that means pretty much 9 times more information/pixels. However that is transmitting the electrons *through* a thin specimen and then analyzing the diffraction pattern to get that, not relying on a focused spot rastered across a specimen and collecting backscattered electron flux.
So, in theory an ALIS would have probably much better resolution than that by a factor of something like 80 if you could somehow run it in TEM mode (guess you would call that a TAM, transmission atom microscope), but then you probably could have done that a long time ago if it were possible or made sense. I'm guessing somehow atoms knocking into other atoms poses some problems in elastic vs inelastic collisions that you don't have with electrons (the challenge with ALIS was to get the He ion source stable so you could form a small beam, not to emit a bunch of He ions through a specimen in a larger area).
Anyway, regardless of this the ALIS is amazing, and that they figured out a way to make the He stable enough is pretty mind boggling, hats off to those smart kids out in frigid MA! Its a relatively new technology and they probably have room to tweak things down further to even smaller resolutions.
The above is just my guess, I don't know enough to speak to the subject fully, would be great if some microscopy expert would jump in here and tell us why exactly the resolution is not knocking the socks off TEM resolutions...