Home > Publications database > Is HRTEM Image Simulation Correct? A Premise-Free Calibration Approach |
Journal Article | FZJ-2017-07728 |
; ;
2016
Cambridge University Press
New York, NY
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Please use a persistent id in citations: http://hdl.handle.net/2128/19355 doi:10.1017/S1431927616007790
Abstract: The comparison of absolute image intensities between experiment and simulation in high-resolutiontransmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) is a long-standing problem, which led to a multitude ofdiscussions and speculations in the past. A huge contrast mismatch, which was first stated by Hytch andStobbs in 1994 [1], could be largely explained in 2009 as a consequence of neglecting the correctmodulation transfer function (MTF) of the recording camera in image simulation [2]. Further smallerrefinements to image simulation, which incorporate also the so-called image-spread effect [3], ledrecently to nearly perfect absolute-intensity matches between experiment and simulation [4,5].
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