Structural Fingerprinting of Nanocrystals in the Transmission Electron Microscope

ORAL

Abstract

Three novel strategies for the structurally identification of nanocrystals in a transmission electron microscope are presented. Either a single high-resolution transmission electron microscopy image [1] or a single precession electron diffractogram (PED) [2] may be employed. PEDs from fine-grained crystal powders may also be utilized. Automation of the former two strategies is in progress and shall lead to statistically significant results on ensembles of nanocrystals. Open-access databases such as the Crystallography Open Database which provides more than 81,500 crystal structure data sets [3] or its mainly inorganic and educational subsets [4] may be utilized. [1] http://www.scientificjournals.org/journals 2007/j{\_}of{\_}dissertation.htm [2] P. Moeck and S. Rouvimov, in: \textit{Drugs and the Pharmaceutical Sciences}, Vol. 191, 2009, 270-313 [3] http://cod.ibt.lt, http://www.crystallography.net, http://cod.ensicaen.fr, http://nanocrystallography.org, http://nanocrystallography.net, http://journals.iucr.org/j/issues/2009/04/00/kk5039/kk5039.pdf [4] http://nanocrystallography.research.pdx.edu/CIF-searchable

Authors

  • Sergei Rouvimov

    Portland State University

  • Pavel Plachinda

    Portland State University, Department of Physics, Portland State University, Portland OR 97207-0751

  • Peter Moeck

    Portland State University, Nano-Crystallography Group, Department of Physics, Portland State University, Portland, OR 97207-0751, Department of Physics, Portland State University, Portland OR 97207-0751 \& Oregon Nanoscience and Microtechnologies Institute, www.onami.us