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Theoretical Limits of Atomic Resolution Electron Tomography: New Bounds for Resolution, Object Size, and Dose

Invited

Abstract

The theoretical limits of electron tomography have long been defined by the Crowther criterion, which relates 3D resolution to the number of projections acquired. However, these relations are invalid for aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) where high convergence angles limit 3D reconstruction. We present a theoretical foundation for aberration-corrected electron tomography by establishing analytic descriptions for resolution, sampling, object size, and dose—with direct analogy to the Crowther criterion. The 3D structure of a contrast transfer function (CTF) for through focal tomography where every specimen tilt measures a toroid with petal-shaped cross-section. A remarkable feature of the 3D CTF is the overlapped regions that permit complete information collection—unachievable with conventional tomography. This breaks expected Crowther relationships and the maximum reconstructable object size is unlimited up to spatial frequency kc. At resolutions beyond 2/kc, Crowther-like tradeoffs define the maximum object size (D) allowed for given 3D resolution (d).

[1] R. Yalisove, S.H. Sung, P. Ercius. R. Hovden, arxiv:2006.06585 (2020)

Presenters

  • Robert Hovden

    University of Michigan

Authors

  • Robert Hovden

    University of Michigan

  • Suk Hyun Hovden

    University of Michigan

  • Peter Ercius

    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of Michigan

  • Reed Yalisove

    University of Michigan