Three-beam convergent-beam electron diffraction for measuring crystallographic phases

IUCrJ. 2018 Oct 8;5(Pt 6):753-764. doi: 10.1107/S2052252518012216. eCollection 2018 Nov 1.

Abstract

Under almost all circumstances, electron diffraction patterns contain information about the phases of structure factors, a consequence of the short wavelength of an electron and its strong Coulombic interaction with matter. However, extracting this information remains a challenge and no generic method exists. In this work, a set of simple analytical expressions is derived for the intensity distribution in convergent-beam electron diffraction (CBED) patterns recorded under three-beam conditions. It is shown that these expressions can be used to identify features in three-beam CBED patterns from which three-phase invariants can be extracted directly, without any iterative refinement processes. The octant, in which the three-phase invariant lies, can be determined simply by inspection of the indexed CBED patterns (i.e. the uncertainty of the phase measurement is ±22.5°). This approach is demonstrated with the experimental measurement of three-phase invariants in two simple test cases: centrosymmetric Si and non-centrosymmetric GaAs. This method may complement existing structure determination methods by providing direct measurements of three-phase invariants to replace 'guessed' invariants in ab initio phasing methods and hence provide more stringent constraints to the structure solution.

Keywords: convergent-beam electron diffraction; crystallographic phase problem; dynamical studies; enantiomorph ambiguity; multiple scattering; nanocrystals; structure determination; three-phase invariants.

Grants and funding

This work was funded by Australian Research Council grants DP150104483 and FT110100427.