Highlighted results that have progressed beyond state of the art, includes:
Fast (4D) TEM tomography. One of the main problems in TEM is the inevitable degradation of the sample produced by the electron beam during the acquisition of the tilt-series. In addition, the relatively slow acquisition during conventional electron tomography hampers the investigation of dynamic effects that occur eg during in situ TEM.
To dramatically accelerate the acquisition of tilt series, so-called “fast tomography” was introduced in both TEM and HAADF-STEM modes. The methodology is based on continuously tilting the holder and simultaneously acquiring projection images, while focusing and tracking the particle at the same time.
Multimode tomography. We exploited the flexibility of modern TEM instruments, in which more than one (H)(A)ADF detector is available. Through the simultaneous use of multiple ADF detectors, a reliable 3D reconstruction of both the morphology of the nanoparticles and the twin planes can be achieved in a dose-efficient manner. Moreover, we combined these studies with EDX mapping in 3D.
Time resolved omni-directional scattering tomography. We have demonstrated a dramatic reduction in data acquisition times, from tens of hours to under a second for a complete 3D data set.
An algorithm for 2D segmentation from projection data, has been developed. Currently, we are working on a 3D version of the algorithm, which shows great promise for high robustness to noise, few projections, and limited angles.
A time-lapse correlative multimodal workflow has been developed (including X-ray CT and related volumetric analyses like digital image and volume correlation, mechanical testing, Raman spectroscopy and electron microscopy) to study the fatigue behaviour of unidirectional glass and carbon fibre composites.
We expect to achieve all of the milestones and deliverables foreseen in the project proposal. Many of these go well beyond current state of the art, and furthermore, in several areas, we expect to go beyond even our foreseen project goals. This will have a profound impact on technologies and science relying on 3D analysis in several ways:
1. Our efforts at establishing a fast, accessible analysis workflow that is accessible and intuitive to work with will enable the adaption of 3D analysis by a wider community, both in science and in industry.
2. The extension to multimodal and multiscale data acquisition, analysis and modelling will broaden the scope of applications for 3D analysis.
3. The improvements in speed of acquisition, reconstruction and analysis, will enable new applications in time-resolved studies that could have impact on medical CT, in vivo studies and on materials processing.