Publications by authors named "Benjamin Savitzky"

Polymeric organic mixed ionic-electronic conductors underpin several technologies in which their electrochemical properties are desirable. These properties, however, depend on the microstructure that develops in their aqueous operational environment. We investigated the structure of a model organic mixed ionic-electronic conductor across multiple length scales using cryogenic four-dimensional scanning transmission electron microscopy in both its dry and hydrated states.

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  • - The 4D Camera is a high-speed sensor designed for electron microscopy, capable of scanning at 87,000 Hz and generating data at approximately 480 Gbit/s, which is processed by specialized computers handling large datasets between 10-700 GB in size.
  • - It features a back illuminated detector that can detect single electron events at voltages ranging from 30 to 300 kV, enabling efficient electron counting that compresses data size significantly (by 10-300 times).
  • - The camera allows for rapid analysis through open-source processing algorithms, facilitating complex scanning diffraction experiments typically done in scanning transmission electron microscopy.
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  • - Understanding the arrangement of crystalline regions in semicrystalline polymers is essential for enhancing their properties, with specific focus on polystyrene-poly(ethylene oxide) (PS--PEO).
  • - The crystallinity and organization of crystallites in the PEO phase significantly influence the physical characteristics of the electrolyte in these materials.
  • - Using advanced four-dimensional scanning transmission electron microscopy, researchers visualized the crystal domains in the PEO-rich area of PS--PEO and established the orientation of these domains relative to the PEO-PS interface, showcasing a method applicable to various semicrystalline polymers.
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  • Current reports on the thermal expansion coefficients (TEC) of 2D materials show significant variation, largely due to the challenges in directly measuring these properties of ultra-thin and transparent samples.
  • The study introduces a new methodology using four-dimensional scanning transmission electron microscopy (4D-STEM) to directly measure the TEC of monolayer WSe during controlled heating from 18-564 °C.
  • The results indicate specific TEC values for WSe that align well with historical data for bulk crystals, providing improved clarity in understanding thermal properties of 2D materials.
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Exploratory synthesis has been the main generator of new inorganic materials for decades. However, our Edisonian and bias-prone processes of synthetic exploration alone are no longer sufficient in an age that demands rapid advances in materials development. In this work, we demonstrate an end-to-end attempt towards systematic, computer-aided discovery and laboratory synthesis of inorganic crystalline compounds as a modern alternative to purely exploratory synthesis.

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Cation exchange is becoming extensively used for nanocrystal (NC) doping in order to produce NCs with unique optical and electronic properties. However, despite its ever-increasing use, the relationships between the cation exchange process, its doped NC products, and the resulting NC photophysics are not well characterized. For example, similar doping procedures on NCs with the same chemical compositions have resulted in quite different photophysics.

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  • Chirality, or handedness, is an important factor in discovering new electronic properties in materials for quantum information science, often found in natural biomolecules and magnetic materials.
  • Researchers engineered chirality in a specific ferroelectric/dielectric system using advanced techniques like four-dimensional scanning transmission electron microscopy (4D-STEM) to analyze three-dimensional domain walls and their interactions.
  • The unique characteristics of these domain walls, influenced by local polarization and symmetry-breaking, lead to the formation of triple points, which could enhance electrostatic and magnetic properties relevant for quantum sensing technologies.
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Determining the degree and the spatial extent of structural order in liquids is a grand challenge. Here, we are able to resolve the structural order in a model organic electrolyte of 1 M lithium hexafluorophosphate (LiPF) dissolved in 1:1 (v/v) ethylene carbonate:diethylcarbonate by developing an integrated method of liquid-phase transmission electron microscopy (TEM), cryo-TEM operated at -30°C, four-dimensional scanning TEM, and data analysis based on deep learning. This study reveals the presence of short-range order (SRO) in the high-salt concentration domains of the liquid electrolyte from liquid phase separation at the low temperature.

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Spontaneous hierarchical self-organization of nanometre-scale subunits into higher-level complex structures is ubiquitous in nature. The creation of synthetic nanomaterials that mimic the self-organization of complex superstructures commonly seen in biomolecules has proved challenging due to the lack of biomolecule-like building blocks that feature versatile, programmable interactions to render structural complexity. In this study, highly aligned structures are obtained from an organic-inorganic mesophase composed of monodisperse CdS magic-size cluster building blocks.

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Understanding and visualizing the heterogeneous structure of immiscible semicrystalline polymer systems is critical for optimizing their morphology and microstructure. We demonstrate a cryogenic 4D-STEM technique using a combination of amorphous radial profile mapping and correlative crystalline growth processing methods to map both the crystalline and amorphous phase distribution in an isotactic polypropylene (iPP)/ethylene-octene copolymer (EO) multilayer film with 5-nm step size. The resulting map shows a very sharp interface between the amorphous iPP and EO with no preferential crystalline structure near or at the interface, reinforcing the expected incompatibility and immiscibility of iPP and EO, which is a short-chain branched polyethylene.

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Constitutive laws underlie most physical processes in nature. However, learning such equations in heterogeneous solids (for example, due to phase separation) is challenging. One such relationship is between composition and eigenstrain, which governs the chemo-mechanical expansion in solids.

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Crystalline materials used in technological applications are often complex assemblies composed of multiple phases and differently oriented grains. Robust identification of the phases and orientation relationships from these samples is crucial, but the information extracted from the diffraction condition probed by an electron beam is often incomplete. We have developed an automated crystal orientation mapping (ACOM) procedure which uses a converged electron probe to collect diffraction patterns from multiple locations across a complex sample.

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Polar textures have attracted substantial attention in recent years as a promising analog to spin-based textures in ferromagnets. Here, using optical second-harmonic generation–based circular dichroism, we demonstrate deterministic and reversible control of chirality over mesoscale regions in ferroelectric vortices using an applied electric field. The microscopic origins of the chirality, the pathway during the switching, and the mechanism for electric field control are described theoretically via phase-field modeling and second-principles simulations, and experimentally by examination of the microscopic response of the vortices under an applied field.

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A pearl's distinguished beauty and toughness are attributable to the periodic stacking of aragonite tablets known as nacre. Nacre has naturally occurring mesoscale periodicity that remarkably arises in the absence of discrete translational symmetry. Gleaning the inspiring biomineral design of a pearl requires quantifying its structural coherence and understanding the stochastic processes that influence formation.

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Crystallization by particle attachment (CPA) is a gradual process where each step has its own thermodynamic and kinetic constrains defining a unique pathway of crystal growth. An important example is biomineralization of calcium carbonate through amorphous precursors that are morphed into shapes and textural patterns that cannot be envisioned by the classical monomer-by-monomer approach. Here, a mechanistic link between the collective kinetics of mineral deposition and the emergence of crystallographic texture is established.

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Scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) is an extremely versatile method for studying materials on the atomic scale. Many STEM experiments are supported or validated with electron scattering simulations. However, using the conventional multislice algorithm to perform these simulations can require extremely large calculation times, particularly for experiments with millions of probe positions as each probe position must be simulated independently.

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Scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) allows for imaging, diffraction, and spectroscopy of materials on length scales ranging from microns to atoms. By using a high-speed, direct electron detector, it is now possible to record a full two-dimensional (2D) image of the diffracted electron beam at each probe position, typically a 2D grid of probe positions. These 4D-STEM datasets are rich in information, including signatures of the local structure, orientation, deformation, electromagnetic fields, and other sample-dependent properties.

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Robust atomic-to-meso-scale chirality is now observed in the one-dimensional form of tellurium. This enables a large and counter-intuitive circular-polarization dependent second harmonic generation response above 0.2 which is not present in two-dimensional tellurium.

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One of the primary uses for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) is to measure diffraction pattern images in order to determine a crystal structure and orientation. In nanobeam electron diffraction (NBED), we scan a moderately converged electron probe over the sample to acquire thousands or even millions of sequential diffraction images, a technique that is especially appropriate for polycrystalline samples. However, due to the large Ewald sphere of TEM, excitation of Bragg peaks can be extremely sensitive to sample tilt, varying strongly for even a few degrees of sample tilt for crystalline samples.

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Nanoscale strain mapping by four-dimensional scanning transmission electron microscopy (4D-STEM) relies on determining the precise locations of Bragg-scattered electrons in a sequence of diffraction patterns, a task which is complicated by dynamical scattering, inelastic scattering, and shot noise. These features hinder accurate automated computational detection and position measurement of the diffracted disks, limiting the precision of measurements of local deformation. Here, we investigate the use of patterned probes to improve the precision of strain mapping.

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Periodic arrays of strongly coupled colloidal quantum dots (QDs) may enable unprecedented control of electronic band structure through manipulation of QD size, shape, composition, spacing, and assembly geometry. This includes the possibilities of precisely engineered bandgaps and charge carrier mobilities, as well as remarkable behaviors such as metal-insulator transitions, massless carriers, and topological states. However, experimental realization of these theoretically predicted electronic structures is presently limited by structural disorder.

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  • Aliovalent doping of CdSe nanocrystals through cation exchange has led to unique optical and electronic properties, but a comprehensive understanding remains elusive due to challenges in characterizing these properties.
  • Researchers used electrostatic force microscopy to measure the static charge on individual, cation-doped CdSe nanocrystals, revealing that while the charge was stable regardless of cation amount, there was a striking link between the average charge and photoluminescence (PL) intensity.
  • The study suggests that the variations in PL intensity correspond to changes in the nanocrystal's radiative rate, influenced by alterations in the electronic states caused by the Coulombic interactions from the introduced ionized cations.
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The size of whole Rhodobacter sphaeroides prevents 3D visualization of centermost chromatophores in their native environment. This study combines cryo-focused ion beam milling with cryo-electron tomography to probe vesicle architecture both in situ and in 3D. Developing chromatophores are membrane-bound buds that remain in topological continuity with the cytoplasmic membrane and detach into vesicles when mature.

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Combining multiple fast image acquisitions to mitigate scan noise and drift artifacts has proven essential for picometer precision, quantitative analysis of atomic resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) data. For very low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) image stacks - frequently required for undistorted imaging at liquid nitrogen temperatures - image registration is particularly delicate, and standard approaches may either fail, or produce subtly specious reconstructed lattice images. We present an approach which effectively registers and averages image stacks which are challenging due to their low-SNR and propensity for unit cell misalignments.

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Incommensurate charge order in hole-doped oxides is intertwined with exotic phenomena such as colossal magnetoresistance, high-temperature superconductivity, and electronic nematicity. Here, we map, at atomic resolution, the nature of incommensurate charge-lattice order in a manganite using scanning transmission electron microscopy at room temperature and cryogenic temperature ([Formula: see text]93 K). In diffraction, the ordering wave vector changes upon cooling, a behavior typically associated with incommensurate order.

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