Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1677970 Ultramicroscopy 2011 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

A methodology for determining the optimal voxel size for phase thresholding in nanostructured materials was developed using an atom simulator and a model system of a fixed two-phase composition and volume fraction. The voxel size range was banded by the atom count within each voxel. Some voxel edge lengths were found to be too large, resulting in an averaging of compositional fluctuations; others were too small with concomitant decreases in the signal-to-noise ratio for phase identification. The simulated methodology was then applied to the more complex experimentally determined data set collected from a (Co0.95Fe0.05)88Zr6Hf1B4Cu1 two-phase nanocomposite alloy to validate the approach. In this alloy, Zr and Hf segregated to an intergranular amorphous phase while Fe preferentially segregated to a crystalline phase during the isothermal annealing step that promoted primary crystallization. The atom probe data analysis of the volume fraction was compared to transmission electron microscopy (TEM) dark-field imaging analysis and a lever rule analysis of the volume fraction within the amorphous and crystalline phases of the ribbon.

► Optimization procedures for determining voxel binning in atom probe data sets. ► Cross-correlation microscopy comparison to validate atom probe volume fraction quantification. ► Application of atom probe simulated data sets to experimental data sets.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Nanotechnology
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