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Secondary Electron Microscopy

Scanning Electron Microscopy images surfaces at very high resolution (10 nanometers, depending on atomic number and surface finish). Images are made by scanning a high-energy primary electron beam onto the sample and collecting the low-energy secondary electrons, which are very surface sensitive. Images can be made more sensitive to sub-surface stress by selectively collecting only elastically-scattered (“backscatter mode”) primary electrons.

scanning electron microscopy labdiagram of how secondary electron microscopy works

photo of breakdown-damaged copper electrode


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