3D Analysis of the Morphology
and Spatial Distribution
of Nitrogen in Nitrogen-Doped Carbon Nanotubes by Energy-Filtered
Transmission Electron Microscopy Tomography
We present here the application of the energy-filtered
transmission
electron microscopy (EFTEM) in the tomographic mode to determine the
precise 3D distribution of nitrogen within nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes
(N-CNTs). Several tilt series of energy-filtered images were acquired
on the K ionization edges of carbon and nitrogen on a multiwalled
N-CNT containing a high amount of nitrogen. Two tilt series of carbon
and nitrogen 2D maps were then calculated from the corresponding energy-filtered
images by using a proper extraction procedure of the chemical signals.
Applying iterative reconstruction algorithms provided two spatially
correlated C and N elemental-selective volumes, which were then simultaneously
analyzed with the shape-sensitive reconstruction deduced from Zero-Loss
recordings. With respect to the previous findings, crucial information
obtained by analyzing the 3D chemical maps was that, among the two
different kind of arches formed in these nanotubes (transversal or
rounded ones depending on their morphology), the transversal arches
contain more nitrogen than do the round ones. In addition, a detailed
analysis of the shape-sensitive volume allowed the observation of
an unexpected change in morphology along the tube axis: close to the
round arches (with less N), the tube is roughly cylindrical, whereas
near the transversal ones (with more N), its shape changes to a prism.
This relatively new technique is very powerful in the material science
because it combines the ability of the classical electron tomography
to solve 3D structures and the chemical selectivity of the EFTEM imaging.