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  4. Height-resolved quantification of microstructure and texture in polycrystalline thin films using TEM orientation mapping
 
research article

Height-resolved quantification of microstructure and texture in polycrystalline thin films using TEM orientation mapping

Aebersold, A. Brian  
•
Alexander, Duncan T. L.  
•
Hebert, Cecile  
2015
Ultramicroscopy

A method is presented for the quantitative investigation of microstructure and texture evolution in polycrystalline thin films based on in-plane automated crystal orientation mapping in transmission electron microscopy, from the substrate up. To demonstrate the method we apply it to the example of low pressure metal-organic chemical vapor deposited ZnO layers. First, orientation mapping is applied to standard cross-section and plan-view transmission electron microscopy samples of films, illustrating how plan-view samples both reduce the occurrence of grain overlap that is detrimental to reliable orientation mapping and also improve sampling statistics compared to cross-sections. Motivated by this, orientation mapping has been combined with a double-wedge method for specimen preparation developed by Spiecker et al. (2007) [11, which creates a large area plan-view sample that traverses the film thickness. By measuring > 10,000 grains in the film, the resulting data give access to grain size, orientation and misorientation distributions in function of height above the substrate within the film, which are, in turn, the inputs necessary for quantitative assessment of growth models and simulations. The orientation data are directly related to microstructural images, allowing correlation of orientations with in-plane and out-of-plane grain sizes and shapes. The spatial correlation of the entire data set gives insights into previously unnoticed growth mechanisms such as the presence of renucleation or preferred misorientations. Finally, the data set can be used to guide targeted, local studies by other transmission electron microscopy techniques. This is demonstrated by the site-specific application of nano-beam diffraction to validate the presence of coherent [2 11 0]/(0 11 3) twin boundaries first suggested by the orientation mapping. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.ultramic.2015.08.005
Web of Science ID

WOS:000366220000013

Author(s)
Aebersold, A. Brian  
Alexander, Duncan T. L.  
Hebert, Cecile  
Date Issued

2015

Publisher

Elsevier Science Bv

Published in
Ultramicroscopy
Volume

159

Start page

112

End page

123

Subjects

Transmission electron microscopy

•

Automated crystal orientation mapping

•

Polycrystalline films

•

Grain growth

•

Texture

•

Grain boundary misorientation

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
CIME  
Available on Infoscience
February 16, 2016
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/124010
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