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Electron Microscope Captures Lithium Atom Images

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BERKELEY, Calif., July 17 -- For the first time, researchers have used a transmission electron microscope -- the One-Angstrom Microscope (OAM) at the Department of Energy's National Center for Electron Microscopy (NCEM) at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory -- to image lithium atoms. Only atoms of hydrogen and helium are smaller and lighter than lithium, which under ordinary conditions is not a gas but a soft, white metal. Yang Shao-Horn of the mechanical engineering department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Michael O'Keefe of Berkeley Lab's Materials Sciences Division...Read full article

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    Published: July 2003
    Glossary
    transmission electron microscope
    A transmission electron microscope (TEM) is a powerful microscopy technique that uses a beam of electrons to create high-resolution images of extremely thin samples. In a TEM, electrons are transmitted through the sample rather than being bounced off its surface, as in scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The sample, typically prepared as an ultrathin section or a thin film, is placed in the path of the electron beam. As the electrons pass through the sample, they interact with its atoms,...
    Basic ScienceBerkeley LabLawrence Berkeley National LaboratoryLiCoO2lithium atomsMicroscopyNational Center for Electron MicroscopyNews & FeaturesOne-Angstrom Microscopetransmission electron microscope

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