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Compositional Phase Mapping using True Colour X-Ray Imaging

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 July 2020

Peter J. Statham*
Affiliation:
Oxford Instruments Microanalysis Group, Halifax Rd., High Wycombe, Bucks HP 12 3SE, U.K.
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Extract

In conventional x-ray mapping, energy regions are defined to straddle the N x-ray spectral peaks of interest. At each pixel position in the digital image, counts are recorded from each energy region and thus give rise to N element maps of intensity distributions over the field of view. Fig. 1 shows an example set of x-ray maps from a polished test sample. It is clear from the images that there are circular regions of differing composition but it is not immediately obvious which regions have the same composition. Furthermore, in a real sample, phases are unlikely to appear in such regular patterns so the correlations between maps are in general much more difficult to notice.

It is possible to choose two x-ray maps and generate a 2D scatter plot showing the intensity values in both maps for all pixels in the image.

Type
Compositional Imaging and Spectroscopy
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America

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References

1.Bright, D.S., Microbeam Analysis-1995, VCH Pub.Inc.(1995) 403404Google Scholar
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4. Oxford Instruments “TNCA SmartMap”.Google Scholar