What You Can See With A SEM?

The last time we used a scanning electron microscope (a SEM), it looked like something from a bad 1950s science fiction movie. These days SEMs, like the one at the IBM research center, look like co…

Hackaday
Tiny beauty: how I make scientific art from behind the microscope

Steve Gschmeissner images tiny creatures and viruses to show the public an unseen world.

Exploring the Unseen Universe: The Marvels of the Electron Microscope

#ElectronMicroscope, #Microscope, #ScanningElectronMicroscope, #SEM, #TEM, #TransmissionElectronMicroscope #Instrumentation Introduction The electron microscope stands as one of the most remarkable inventions in the history of science and technology. It…. Medical Microbiology & Recombinant DNA Technology (RDT) Labs | Read More -

https://micrordt.wordpress.com/2024/05/08/exploring-the-unseen-universe-the-marvels-of-the-electron-microscope/

Exploring the Unseen Universe: The Marvels of the Electron Microscope

#ElectronMicroscope, #Microscope, #ScanningElectronMicroscope, #SEM, #TEM, #TransmissionElectronMicroscope #Instrumentation Introduction The electron microscope stands as one of the most remarkable…

Medical Microbiology & RDT Labs
This past week, I visited with one of my graduate students as she responded to a manuscript review by spending several days looking at her samples on #ScanningElectronMicroscope or #SEM. It is neither of our expertise, but our institution has an underutilized but working SEM. As I watched her surf around sputter-coated surfaces in search of the perfect picture to respond to our reviews, I blurted out...

Home Made Scanning Electron Microscope Show Some Potential

Scanning electron microscopes are one of those niche instruments that most of us don't really need all the time, but would still love to have access to once in a while. Although we've covered a few attempts at home-builds before, many have faltered, except this project over on Hackday.IO by user Vini 's Lab, which appears to be still under active development. The principle of the SEM is pretty simple; a specially prepared sample is bombarded with a focussed beam of electrons, that is steered in a raster pattern. A signal is acquired, using one of a number of techniques, such as secondary electronics (SE) back-scattered electrons (BSE) or simply the transmitted current into the sample. This signal can then be used to form an image of the sample or gather other properties.

Condenser assembly

The project is clearly in the early stages, as the author says, it's a very costly thing to build, but already some of the machined parts are ready for assembly. Work has started on the drive electronics for the condenser stigmata lens. This part of the instrument takes the central part of the rapidly diverging raw electron beam that makes it through the anode, and with a couple of sets of octopole coil sets, and an aperture or two, selects only the central portion of the beam, as well as correcting for any astigmatism in the beam. By adjusting the relative currents through each of the coils, a quadrupole magnetic field is created, which counteracts the beam asymmetry.

Scanning control and signal acquisition are handled by a single dedicated card, which utilises the PIO function of a Raspberry Pi Pico module. The Pico can drive the scanning operation, and with an external FTDI USB3.0 device, send four synchronised channels of acquired sample data back to the host computer. Using PCIe connectors and mating edge connectors on the cards, gives a robust and cost effective physical connection. As can be seen from the project page, a lot of mechanical design is complete, and machining has started, so this is a project to keep an eye on in the coming months, and possibly years!

We have seen a few SEM hacks, here's a teensy powered SEM hack from [Ben Krasnow] and here's another attempt. For such a conceptually simple device, with such immense usefulness, its does seem a bit remiss that there aren't more such projects out there.

#toolhacks #scanningelectronmicroscope #sem

Home Made Scanning Electron Microscope Show Some Potential

Scanning electron microscopes are one of those niche instruments that most of us don’t really need all the time, but would still love to have access to once in a while. Although we’ve c…

Hackaday
Also today, I played on a #ScanningElectronMicroscope (#SEM). Pics: 1. Foam (pic 2 to follow) #physics Awesome! http://qttr.at/1nu7
♻ @thestevebiggs Also today, I played on a #ScanningElectronMicroscope (#SEM). Pics: 1. Foam (pic 2 to follow) #physics Awesome! http://qttr.at/1nu7
Here's pic 2 from the #ScanningElectronMicroscope (#SEM). It's a transistor on a microchip. #physics Very cool! http://qttr.at/1nu8
♻ @thestevebiggs Here's pic 2 from the #ScanningElectronMicroscope (#SEM). It's a transistor on a microchip. #physics Very cool! http://qttr.at/1nu8