Electron beam control in a scanning electron microscope

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024
  • I describe electron beam optics and deflection as they are employed in scanning electron microscopy.
    web.jfet.org/vclk/ - Deflection amplifier
    www.johngineer.... - CRT Christmas tree
    www.fei.com/ - FEI Company

Комментарии • 119

  • @GuyFawkes911
    @GuyFawkes911 10 лет назад +2

    People say you can't build an electron microscope at home. But Ben didn't know and just build it. You are the man! I love your videos I get a lot of inspiration from them. keep up the good work.

  • @w2aew
    @w2aew 10 лет назад +27

    Ben - you can use a parallel port drive into a simple R2R Ladder DAC to be able to speed up your scan dramatically. I did a video on this. Skip ahead through the R2R tutorial and start watching at about 11 minutes in:
    Basics of R-2R Resistor Networks for Digital Analog Conversion, Tutorial DAC Thevenin Superposition
    This will be MUCH faster than the PWM outputs. I show an XY example where a more complex XY drawn figure is flicker-free on my scope.

  • @41088avl01
    @41088avl01 10 лет назад +8

    Best channel on youtube.

  • @RimstarOrg
    @RimstarOrg 10 лет назад +10

    Awesome. Makes me wonder if a TV tube electronics could be converted. It'd have to but put in a vacuum chamber of course. Now I'll have to look back at your previous electron microscope videos.

    • @titanaldo9024
      @titanaldo9024 3 года назад

      i guess im randomly asking but does anyone know of a way to get back into an Instagram account??
      I was stupid lost the account password. I love any tricks you can offer me.

    • @edwinleroy8002
      @edwinleroy8002 3 года назад

      @Titan Aldo Instablaster :)

    • @titanaldo9024
      @titanaldo9024 3 года назад

      @Edwin Leroy Thanks for your reply. I got to the site thru google and I'm trying it out atm.
      Seems to take a while so I will reply here later when my account password hopefully is recovered.

    • @titanaldo9024
      @titanaldo9024 3 года назад

      @Edwin Leroy It did the trick and I finally got access to my account again. Im so happy:D
      Thanks so much you saved my account :D

    • @edwinleroy8002
      @edwinleroy8002 3 года назад

      @Titan Aldo You are welcome xD

  • @hpux735
    @hpux735 10 лет назад

    I LOVE that you're working on the SEM again! Can't wait to see more!

  • @mikeissweet
    @mikeissweet 10 лет назад

    I've watched almost all your videos now. You are a very clever dude! Keep up the great work. It's the people like you that make youtube great. Thank you.

  • @Cnctrldotcom
    @Cnctrldotcom 10 лет назад

    Wow, brilliant project. I've always fancied a go at making a mass-spec which I imagine would be quite similar.

  • @jcims
    @jcims 10 лет назад +1

    If there was a metric of average cool new things I learn per video, your channel is pretty much right at the top of the list. I've never seen, heard of or even contemplated the possibility of spinning vanes fast enough to literally bat individual molecules out of a region of space. Looking into that, I learned the term 'mean free path', which is something that I had wondered about but didn't have the vocabulary to look up. At the pressures you are achieving, the air molecules are likely colliding with nothing but glass and steel 90% of the time.
    I'm sure the pump is very well balanced, but i can hear it spinning up. Do you have to do any vibration damping or isolation to avoid affecting the microscope?
    I imagine that new toy is going to do great things for your sputtering projects as well!
    Thanks again for an awesome video...

  • @studleylee
    @studleylee 10 лет назад

    Ben, as usual, amazing! TODO list : next grow a pentacene-doped p-Terphenyl crystal and we can make the maser.....

  • @semidemiurge
    @semidemiurge 10 лет назад

    High information density on this one. I will have to re-watch a time or two to parse your explanation. This is a feature not a fault. thank you for your detailed explanation that is just at the right level.

  • @achuck4321
    @achuck4321 10 лет назад

    What an impressive build!! Wow!

  • @TehHijack
    @TehHijack 10 лет назад +1

    HOLY SHIT, Is this you ben? How It's Made Magnets 4:25
    i swear this guy looks exactly like you!!!

  • @kay486
    @kay486 10 лет назад

    finaly a new video!! too bad you do not make them more often, i just love the stuff you do.

  • @ben315to405thenstop
    @ben315to405thenstop 10 лет назад

    Subbed this has to be the coolest souding video on youtube

  • @CookingwithQ
    @CookingwithQ 10 лет назад +62

    is it just me, or does it seem like Ben could build an Iron Man suit if he really wanted to?

    • @AppliedScience
      @AppliedScience  10 лет назад +45

      While I definitely enjoy the compliments, remember that there are lots of qualified and talented hardware engineers in the world -- many of whom are far more accomplished than I am -- I just happen to make videos about my work.

    • @CookingwithQ
      @CookingwithQ 10 лет назад +7

      Applied Science but communicating this science and technology is sometimes just as important
      also, would you be available as a guest on my little podcast?

    • @JRo250
      @JRo250 10 лет назад +5

      I agree. It takes a complete domain of the subject to be able to break it down in simple terms like you do.

    • @burnhamaj
      @burnhamaj 10 лет назад +1

      JRoque250 "simple terms" :) While I am able to follow him when he talks about things like PWM and voltage follower, I doubt the average person would call it "simple". Regardless, he does do a fantastic job of explaining everything.

    • @manudehanoi
      @manudehanoi 10 лет назад +1

      Applied Science
      humility is good but "lots" is a relative number. Not so many pple can design and build this kind of thing on their time and money. Now the mandatory compliment is done, can you please tell me how you machined the pinholes ?

  • @Nexus2Eden
    @Nexus2Eden 10 лет назад

    Always amazing Ben, Great show-n-tell! :D

  • @alberto12589
    @alberto12589 10 лет назад +2

    awesome stuff man

  • @pvc988
    @pvc988 10 лет назад +3

    You could use ADV7123 DAC chip from Analog Devices. It is very fast 3 channel 10 bit video DAC. Hook it up to your FPGA board with some soft core CPU and you will have fast and configurable XY(Z) deflection signal generator (of course if you are ok with 300 MHz bandwidth :). These chips are not that expensive. Or you can find them on many AMD graphic cards.

    • @mdesm2005
      @mdesm2005 10 лет назад

      An FPGA demo board with a fast DAC will give you fast and precise timing (no jitter). Digilent has a selection of such boards, with S/W communication libraries and some demo HDL code. Down load Xilinx's ISE webpack for free and write the code in Verilog. I don't work for either company but I use their products.

  • @TheBandScanner
    @TheBandScanner 10 лет назад

    Excellent. I would recommend that the deflection plates be replaced with graphene grids when that technology becomes available.

  • @berni8k
    @berni8k 10 лет назад

    You can probably get more speed and accuracy from your driver circuit by using an opamp to feedback sense the real voltage on the output and correct for it.
    Oh and if you are planing to do digital acquisition this is a good place to use a FPGA where you can easily grab data from a high speed ADC at 10 to 200 megapixels per second, buffer it and then directly show the live high res image on a VGA monitor or freeze it and send the image to a PC (You can get few Mbit/s links with some COM port emulation chips to transfer the large image in a reasonable amount of time). I can offer help with the FPGA side of things.

  • @PedroAlmeidaTube
    @PedroAlmeidaTube 10 лет назад

    you dont need a uC with a true DAC to make good stuff, you could use a good uC with a high resolution PWM (usually with a very speedy clock and lots of bits). i work with power electronics, and have been successfully implementing power converters with digital control and very high resolution PWM that gives me fine control of variables with the TIVA TM4C123G uC from TI. it is exceptional piece of hardware (80 MHz, 32 bit, floating-point single-precision) and very easy to program... im sure you would like it!

  • @belajarbisnisonline9324
    @belajarbisnisonline9324 3 года назад

    I love it million times.

  • @larso9712
    @larso9712 5 лет назад +1

    Great video and great topics. It is fascinating me how this hightech equipment like an SEM can be constructed by hacking together some simple equipment and your skills to do this. Just amazing!
    But I have some other questions: Why do you turn on the turbomolecular pump so late? Systems with build in turbos just turn it on with the rough pump as far as I know. Do you think this waiting is expanding the lifetime of the turbo pump significantly?

  • @anthonywilliams7052
    @anthonywilliams7052 3 года назад

    Why not upgrade the electron gun with one from a CRT like the common 0.28mm dot pitch monitors? And you even get 3 guns per CRT for the RGB dots or stripes. Maybe even saving most of the CRT neck and using the existing monitor scanning for scanning a sample using the deflection coils? Some even have dynamic focus for the slightly different distance across the tube face. Just greatly reduce the picture size and add some current sensing for the sample.

  • @slap_my_hand
    @slap_my_hand 3 года назад

    I'd turn the circuit into a pseudo-differential amplifier with two separate common emitter power stages, each driven by an op amp that corrects for nonlinearity.

  • @nbsr1
    @nbsr1 10 лет назад

    These two extra cascode transistors also make the amplifier faster and more linear.

  • @Nikkuuu69
    @Nikkuuu69 10 лет назад

    There are some STM32 micro-controllers with a built in DAC, they aren't the friendliest to use, but very fast! (for instance the Cortex M4 series) There should be at least a few Arduino compatible micro-controller boards that have a built in DAC, or you could possibly use a very fast IC that works through SPI (or maybe a parallel interface, depends on the precision you need)

  • @nophead
    @nophead 10 лет назад

    Ben, removing the top transistors will greatly reduce the bandwidth and slew rate. Scopes use a cascode circuit where the top transistors operate in common base mode to eliminate miller capacitance feedback.

    • @AppliedScience
      @AppliedScience  10 лет назад

      This is a good point. I didn't know the cascode would help bandwidth so much. The gain in this system is about 100, so the Miller capacitance does become a noticeable problem. I guess adding another transistor is so low cost, and appears to improve performance in every axis, why not do it?!

    • @nophead
      @nophead 10 лет назад

      Yes as I think only the top transistors need to be the high voltage ones, the bottom ones can be cheaper devices.

  • @l28power
    @l28power 10 лет назад

    Keep it simple - use a low cost CPLD or FPGA with a R2R DAC followed by a output amplifier. With a simple Xilinx CPLD you can make a very high speed binary counter - simply vary the clock speed for the beam scan raster frequency. You'd need one more electrode near your electron gun to modulate the beam though if you want to draw images .A XL9500 family chip will go to 50Mhz easily for only a few $$. Using a microcontroller will potentially limit scan speeds due to processing time.

  • @mfeldheim
    @mfeldheim 5 лет назад

    Nice idea to take the crt piece for visualization

  • @OnlyKnowsGod
    @OnlyKnowsGod 10 лет назад

    Nice. But i hope the magnifercation will greatly improve as last time you didnt get as high as of that of a light microscope which made use of this project pointless as a traditional microscope could have done the same job.. But as a technical exercise and a continualy improving project i must admit its looking good thus far.

  • @jimw83296
    @jimw83296 9 лет назад

    do you remember those old video cameras that used vidicon tubes?....i do.
    try using the magnetic deflection yoke from one of those?
    sometimes they even include a focus coil.
    also, they're spesifically built to provide a clean magnetic feild.

  • @Daedronus
    @Daedronus 10 лет назад

    You need something to isolate vibrations from the turbo pump, in this respect the dif pump was better.
    I would also use 32bit IC dacs for beam control.

  • @diactriac
    @diactriac 10 лет назад

    nice work, please use a propeller (p8x32a), is a microcontroller with 8 processors 32 bits running at 100MHz, probably for this job is perfect

  • @neer85
    @neer85 10 лет назад

    looking forward to hear TEM from you

  • @jimw83296
    @jimw83296 10 лет назад

    hey, very nice build.....looks almost like one i saw in the archive when i was a kid.
    it was an alvorst lmp-4500.....about 175 (+\- 25) years old, but a good instrument in ti's day.
    although, your sensor is a bit more complex.....it's that phosphored disk that's a little over complicated.
    the problem is this....ambient light will cause interference.
    the lmp-4500 never had that problem...no phosphor disk!
    try this.....take the photocathode off that photomultiplier tube and feed the dynode stack direct.....trust me, it'll work a total treat!
    although you could use that one with the black-coated dynodes, it should give better performance than that phosphor disk rig you've got right now.
    if i could send some drawings i would.....my great grandad's been at this stuff since long before my dad was even born (and i'll be 52 this april!)
    l8er!....;)

  • @mixolydian2010
    @mixolydian2010 10 лет назад

    Brilliant cheers Ben

  • @Hubbins29
    @Hubbins29 10 лет назад

    Amazing work

  • @beautifulsmall
    @beautifulsmall 2 года назад

    Could you keep the beam unfocused and scan a shadow mask. Baird., tempted to make one, optical scanning with UV ? I tried to make an SEM using a high definition CRT TV electron gun and had an interesting introduction with vacuum . had to shelve it . this was when we had CRT tv's ..sold the diff pump and pirani gauges but just got a turb mole with controller under £100. and now need gauges. Its a wonderful world.

  • @supervisor1067
    @supervisor1067 6 лет назад

    Excellent video. Can you give, please, more details about lenses (geometry, voltages)?

  • @DanFrederiksen
    @DanFrederiksen 10 лет назад

    does it really need to be fast? it's not like you will be looking at animated things?

  • @dtjiangutube
    @dtjiangutube Год назад

    How small can you achieve with the electron beam?

  • @johnnycash4034
    @johnnycash4034 2 года назад

    Was there ever a follow up video?

  • @jcims
    @jcims 10 лет назад

    Could you use a similar concept to steer ionized molecules in your sputtering chamber (not sure if they are naturally ionized by the process or not)? Maybe pass through a small aperture to provide a manageable beam size? It occurred to me that if you could focus and steer that material you could 'print' shapes without using a stencil (at the cost of time most likely)

  • @whitcwa
    @whitcwa 10 лет назад

    What size deflection are you aiming for? I would guess 10mm square would be plenty. Your sputtering experience will be useful for coating non-metallic samples. I want to see an ant or fly!

  • @thyandyr7369
    @thyandyr7369 6 лет назад

    Hello, do you know of DC/DC converter component that could output more than 10 kV DC from input of typical table top power supply (0-20 VDC). EMCO CB101 goes only up to 10 kV DC.

  • @PiezPiedPy
    @PiezPiedPy 10 лет назад

    Nice1 Ben ;)

  • @damienmiller
    @damienmiller 10 лет назад +1

    When you move on to microscopy, how will you capture the return from the sample? Will you use a phosphor+PMT or is there some more direct way of acquiring an image?

    • @AppliedScience
      @AppliedScience  10 лет назад +2

      The traditional approach that I've already used is the Everhart-Thornley detector. It uses a phosphor screen that is mounted onto a photomultiplier. This allows the phosphor screen to be highly charged to accelerate electrons toward it, and then allows the PMT to operate with an isolated electrical system. There are also other vague reasons about why a phosphor screen coupled to a PMT is better. It definitely works, and is still state-of-the-art, however I want to try using a direct electron multiplier to detect the signal. This would allow the machine to operate without a cover over the bell jar in full room lighting.

  • @LoadBearingSolder
    @LoadBearingSolder 4 года назад

    Hey Ben, I was trying to do a similar project but I can't seem to find a p-47 or YAB scintillator that's under like $110. Do you know of any place I could get a cheaper phosphor, or if there's a way I could buy the phosphor material itself to coat a piece of glass with?

  • @overheardatthepub1238
    @overheardatthepub1238 10 лет назад

    Awesome.

  • @smallmoneysalvia
    @smallmoneysalvia 6 лет назад

    How do you fund all this? I would love to be able to afford to experiment like this.

  • @BenNBuilds
    @BenNBuilds 10 лет назад

    Nice! I didn't think you'd ever do another SEM Video
    This is super helpful, I was going to use triangle wave generators and some amplifiers to try and get a nice scan. That turbo pump is epic, 500 mtorr to 4e-10! Do you notice any differences in the behavior inside the chamber vs the oil vapor present with a baffled diffusion pump setup?

    • @AppliedScience
      @AppliedScience  10 лет назад +1

      I'm planning to make the acquisition all digital. I'll use a microcontroller to generate the raster, and collect data with the micro's ADC, and have the whole thing controlled over USB. The bandwidth is a concern, so it will probably have to be high-speed mode for realtime video (focusing would be difficult without at least 15 fps video). I haven't noticed effects of diffusion pump vapor -- it may take a while to build up. Someone said that the deposits in my Penning gauge were caused by pump oil, but I'm not sure. I can see why the industry moved to using turbomolecular pumps in general. They are much better in every axis -- except cost!

    • @puddingpimp
      @puddingpimp 10 лет назад

      Applied Science If you can generate a 15kHz horizontal raster, you can make the beam timing equivalent to NTSC or PAL video, then you just need an old analog video capture card.

    • @puddingpimp
      @puddingpimp 10 лет назад

      I also heard that with the BT878 chipset, it captures also the front and back porch, and the vertical blank, in that case you could run the vertical and horizontal traces at some division of normal TV50/TV60 rates and delivering the full optical field spread out over multiple sequential capture-fields.

  • @ShindenZero
    @ShindenZero 10 лет назад +1

    Ben, are you using spark plugs as electrical feedthroughs?

  • @Leonelf0
    @Leonelf0 10 лет назад

    are those electron lenses electrostatic or magnetic?

  • @robertkurowski9039
    @robertkurowski9039 5 лет назад

    I plan on trying to make this with my boy

  • @TCatfishEatist
    @TCatfishEatist 10 лет назад +1

    Where do you people get the money for these things?

    • @linuspauly2380
      @linuspauly2380 6 лет назад

      Pentagular Dark the place where they are not spending it elsewhere

  • @maxkammerlander7935
    @maxkammerlander7935 10 лет назад

    How do you even make an electron beam? I know it might sound like a stupid question but I have no clue how I would go about it. Maybe make a plasma and try and access the loose electrons that way. Secondly, why are there spark plugs in the vacuum chamber?. Once again I apologise that they may be stupid questions but it would be great if someone could help me out in trying to understand this stuff.
    ;)

  • @edwinjesus1757
    @edwinjesus1757 8 лет назад

    Where buy your electron gun

  • @Knight8365
    @Knight8365 10 лет назад

    Hi Ben; I heard about redpitaya dot com recently and thought this might help in your build. Still seems to be in prototype stage, but once available could be pretty amazing. HTH

  • @NinjaOnANinja
    @NinjaOnANinja 10 лет назад +1

    When are you going to make a real light saber?

  • @mrsirlukasko
    @mrsirlukasko 10 лет назад

    Applied science, exactly what is your line of work? Are you an electron microscopist?

  • @billkillernic
    @billkillernic 6 лет назад

    So any news about this project?

  • @elboa8
    @elboa8 10 лет назад

    Nice. Do you ever sleep Ben?
    Great vids.

  • @jossi166
    @jossi166 10 лет назад

    What do you use as a display for the pirani gauge?

    • @AppliedScience
      @AppliedScience  10 лет назад

      The gauge outputs 0-10V, and so I used a cheap self-contained digital voltage meter from eBay. It works great!

  • @DavidFowlerEngineer
    @DavidFowlerEngineer 10 лет назад

    Ben, there is some good information about DAC interfacing at uChobby.com
    www.uchobby.com/index.php/2008/01/08/arduino-audio-dac-options
    One thing you can do is change the PWM frequency to something much higher. I used 60KHz PWM to do an audio range DAC. With the higher frequency you can set your PWM to analog filter for about 60KHz and sweep around at maybe 30 or 40KHz.

  • @user-qw3jn7bd7i
    @user-qw3jn7bd7i 2 года назад

    뭔가 약간부족한 느낌이듭니다.
    스케너의 원리와 실물이 보고싶었는데요...

  • @gingermann19
    @gingermann19 10 лет назад

    Where did you go to school?

  • @bitluni
    @bitluni 10 лет назад

    You need some parallel DACs like R-2R resistor ladders. I created a detailed video on this achieving a sampling rate of about 3MHz:
    DAC using R-2R resistor ladder
    Important is to write 8Bit ports that are completely mapped to pins of the Arduino directly not using arduino digitalWrite. Unfortunetelly the Uno hasn't two complete 8 Ports. Candidates on the Arduino Mega are PORTA, PORTF, PORTK and PORTC.
    You can see the mapping here:
    arduino.cc/en/Hacking/PinMapping2560
    A demonstration how I have used 3 ports (X/Y + sound) a once from the Mega can be seen in this video (code can be taken from the description):
    ruclips.net/video/nTC3vJzc0MY/видео.htmlm9s
    But in difference to my synth I would rather use use opamps like in the vid above to get best precision. Disconnecting the Arduino from USB reduces the noise significantly.
    Looking forward to see your results

    • @Daedronus
      @Daedronus 10 лет назад

      R-2R dacs are very fast, I can get VGA output out of them, but beyond 6 bits they no longer work OK. Also they tend not to be too linear, even with precision resistors.

    • @bitluni
      @bitluni 10 лет назад

      Daedronus the only slight problems is saw were with values close to 0 when not using opamp. you can clearly see in the first video clear distinguishable steps on the oscilloscope even on 8bits. I think you could even use more than that. Also to get clean output you need reasonable decoupling. the more complex your circuit is. the more noise is induced.
      But let's see what solution Ben will find :)

  • @thewhitefalcon8539
    @thewhitefalcon8539 6 лет назад

    You should really automate that startup sequence.

    • @MadScientist267
      @MadScientist267 3 года назад

      I mean it has matured at this point where startup sequence automation is crucial...

  • @dash8brj
    @dash8brj Год назад

    You ust built an electron beam projector instead of a laser projector. ;)

  • @RyanBrodyWilcox
    @RyanBrodyWilcox 10 лет назад

    Hay Ben, maybe you could think about using the Red Pitaya (redpitaya.com/) for analog control/data acquisition for the electron microscope. I think it might be a good fit for high speed control of it.

  • @NautyEskimo
    @NautyEskimo 10 лет назад +2

    so cool. have you thought of making a mini nuclear reactor and im not joking because it can be done

    • @QuantumFluxable
      @QuantumFluxable 10 лет назад +2

      That sounds like a pretty stupid idea.

    • @AppliedScience
      @AppliedScience  10 лет назад +9

      Actually, yes. I wanted (and still) want to make a linear accelerator, and one of the interesting things that can be done with it is make a nuclear "energy amplifier". It doesn't require the fissile material to be critical -- it relies on protons from the beam to keep the fission reaction running. I think thorium is a good material that will drop below criticality if the beam is shut down. Unfortunately, the accelerator itself is already pretty absurdly hazardous, and the activated thorium is even worse, so the whole project is pretty extreme. The easiest way to get nuclear power in a small package is a radioisotope thermoelectric generator. So then, all I would need is some plutonium. Got any sources?

    • @gimpdoctor8362
      @gimpdoctor8362 10 лет назад

      Applied Science ...ebay

    • @NautyEskimo
      @NautyEskimo 10 лет назад

      Ben Nutley or like that one guy who bought a whole lot of smoke detectors. Even tho that is americium-241 and not plutonium

  • @narinpornwatcharakul6237
    @narinpornwatcharakul6237 8 лет назад

    ความยาวคลื่น รายละเอียด อีก ว่าทำ ไปต้อง ยาวเท่าไร
    แต่ละท่อน

  • @SortEnthusiast
    @SortEnthusiast 10 лет назад

    mahy-kros-kuh-pee
    Neat project, but English is really a terrible language for this.