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xii | |
Preface and Acknowledgements |
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xvii | |
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1 | (188) |
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1 Past, Present, and Future Electron Microscopy of Liquid Specimens |
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3 | (32) |
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3 | (1) |
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1.2 The Rapidly Developing Liquid Cell Microscopy Technique |
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4 | (8) |
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1.3 Liquid Cell Microscopy for Materials Science, Biology, and Beyond |
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12 | (7) |
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1.4 Which Type of Microscopy Should I Use? |
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19 | (2) |
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21 | (4) |
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25 | (10) |
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25 | (10) |
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2 Encapsulated Liquid Cells for Transmission Electron Microscopy |
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35 | (21) |
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35 | (2) |
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2.2 Microfabricated Chip Designs |
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37 | (8) |
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2.3 Other Encapsulation Methods |
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45 | (1) |
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2.4 What Happens When the Liquid Cell Fails? |
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46 | (1) |
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2.5 Membrane Bulging: Mitigation and Measurement |
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47 | (2) |
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2.6 Stimuli and Correlative Measurements: Biasing, Heating, Flow, and Spectroscopy |
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49 | (2) |
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2.7 Conclusions and Outlook |
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51 | (5) |
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52 | (4) |
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3 Imaging Liquid Processes Using Open Cells in the TEM, SEM, and Beyond |
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56 | (22) |
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56 | (1) |
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3.2 Fundamental Concepts for Open Cell Experiments in S/TEM |
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57 | (2) |
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3.3 Open Cells for Imaging Droplets, Crystal Growth, Particle Motion and Surface Passivation |
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59 | (4) |
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3.4 Open Cells for In Situ Battery Reactions |
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63 | (9) |
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3.5 Extension of the Open Cell Concept to Other Imaging and Spectroscopic Techniques |
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72 | (1) |
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73 | (5) |
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74 | (1) |
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75 | (3) |
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4 Membrane-Based Environmental Cells for SEM in Liquids |
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78 | (28) |
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78 | (2) |
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4.2 Basics of SEM through Membranes |
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80 | (5) |
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4.3 Examples of Environmental Cell Designs and Liquid SEM Applications |
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85 | (7) |
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4.4 Novel Two-Dimensional Materials as Electron-Transparent Membranes for Liquid SEM Cells |
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92 | (7) |
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99 | (7) |
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101 | (1) |
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101 | (5) |
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5 Observations in Liquids Using an Inverted SEM |
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106 | (21) |
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106 | (1) |
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5.2 Instrument Design and Sample Geometry of the ASEM |
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106 | (3) |
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109 | (7) |
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5.4 Correlative Microscopy (CLEM) |
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116 | (4) |
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5.5 Other SEM Techniques for Examining Liquids at Atmospheric Pressure |
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120 | (3) |
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123 | (4) |
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124 | (1) |
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124 | (3) |
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6 Temperature Control in Liquid Cells for TEM |
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127 | (13) |
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6.1 Introduction: Controlled Temperature Experiments |
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127 | (4) |
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6.2 Electron Beam-Induced Heating |
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131 | (1) |
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6.3 Temperature Measurements |
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132 | (1) |
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133 | (4) |
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137 | (3) |
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138 | (2) |
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7 Electron Beam Effects in Liquid Cell TEM and STEM |
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140 | (24) |
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140 | (1) |
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7.2 Electron Energy Loss in Liquids |
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140 | (4) |
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7.3 Electron Beam Heating |
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144 | (3) |
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7.4 Introduction to the Radiation Chemistry of Water |
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147 | (3) |
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7.5 Homogeneous Irradiation |
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150 | (2) |
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7.6 Finite Beam Irradiation with Diffusion |
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152 | (2) |
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7.7 Practical Effects of Radiolysis |
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154 | (5) |
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7.8 Radiolysis beyond Neat Water |
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159 | (1) |
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7.9 Conclusions and Outlook |
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160 | (4) |
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161 | (3) |
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8 Resolution in Liquid Cell Experiments |
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164 | (25) |
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164 | (1) |
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8.2 Spatial Resolution in Liquid Cell TEM |
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165 | (9) |
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8.3 Spatial Resolution in Liquid Cell STEM |
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174 | (3) |
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8.4 Temporal Resolution in TEM and STEM |
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177 | (2) |
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8.5 Image Simulations in Liquid Cell TEM and STEM |
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179 | (1) |
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8.6 Some Practicalities and Pitfalls of Liquid Cell TEM and STEM |
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179 | (6) |
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185 | (4) |
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185 | (1) |
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186 | (3) |
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189 | (202) |
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9 Nanostructure Growth, Interactions, and Assembly in the Liquid Phase |
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191 | (19) |
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191 | (1) |
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9.2 Formation of Nanoparticles in TEM |
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192 | (2) |
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9.3 Single Particle Growth Trajectories |
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194 | (3) |
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9.4 Important Factors in Nanoparticle Growth |
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197 | (3) |
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9.5 Growth of Materials Architectures |
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200 | (1) |
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9.6 Nanoparticle Diffusion and Assembly |
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201 | (4) |
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9.7 Etching and Corrosion |
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205 | (1) |
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9.8 Conclusions and Outlook |
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205 | (5) |
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206 | (1) |
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206 | (4) |
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10 Quantifying Electrochemical Processes Using Liquid Cell TEM |
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210 | (27) |
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210 | (1) |
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10.2 Design of Liquid Cells for Quantitative Electrochemical Experiments |
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211 | (8) |
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10.3 Electrochemical Nucleation and Growth in Plan View |
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219 | (5) |
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10.4 Growth Front Propagation via Lateral Measurements |
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224 | (4) |
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10.5 Experimental Challenges |
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228 | (4) |
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232 | (5) |
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233 | (4) |
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11 Application of Electrochemical Liquid Cells for Electrical Energy Storage and Conversion Studies |
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237 | (21) |
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237 | (1) |
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11.2 Electrical Energy Storage and Conversion Systems: Challenges and Opportunities |
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237 | (1) |
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11.3 Closed Cell Electrochemical-S/TEM for Energy Storage and Conversion Studies |
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238 | (4) |
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11.4 Electroanalytical Measurement Techniques |
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242 | (2) |
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11.5 Application of Electrochemical-S/TEM for Battery Research |
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244 | (8) |
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11.6 Application of ec-S/TEM for Fuel Cell Research |
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252 | (2) |
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254 | (4) |
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254 | (1) |
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255 | (3) |
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12 Applications of Liquid Cell TEM in Corrosion Science |
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258 | (18) |
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258 | (1) |
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12.2 Studying Corrosion in Aqueous Environments |
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259 | (2) |
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12.3 Studies of Corrosion using Liquid Cell TEM |
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261 | (5) |
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12.4 Considerations Pertaining to Studying Corrosion with Liquid Cell TEM |
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266 | (4) |
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12.5 Microfluidic Cell Design for Electrochemical Corrosion Experiments |
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270 | (1) |
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271 | (5) |
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272 | (1) |
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272 | (4) |
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13 Nanoscale Water Imaged by In Situ TEM |
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276 | (15) |
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276 | (1) |
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277 | (3) |
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13.3 Nanodroplet Condensation |
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280 | (2) |
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13.4 Fluids in Nanochannels |
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282 | (3) |
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13.5 Voids and Nanobubbles in Liquid Films |
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285 | (1) |
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286 | (5) |
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287 | (4) |
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14 Nanoscale Deposition and Etching of Materials Using Focused Electron Beams and Liquid Reactants |
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291 | (25) |
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14.1 Overview of Gas-Phase Focused Electron Beam-Induced Processing (FEBIP) |
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291 | (2) |
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14.2 Methods for LP-FEBIP |
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293 | (6) |
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14.3 Survey of LP-FEBID of Transition Metals |
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299 | (4) |
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14.4 Multi-element LP-FEBID |
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303 | (3) |
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14.5 Liquid-Phase Focused Electron Beam-Induced Etching (LP-FEBIE) |
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306 | (3) |
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14.6 Mechanisms for LP-FEBIP |
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309 | (1) |
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310 | (6) |
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310 | (1) |
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310 | (6) |
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15 Liquid Cell TEM for Studying Environmental and Biological Mineral Systems |
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316 | (18) |
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316 | (1) |
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15.2 Mechanisms of Mineral Formation |
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317 | (2) |
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15.3 Liquid Holder Design |
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319 | (2) |
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15.4 Calcium Carbonate Formation Pathways |
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321 | (3) |
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15.5 Nucleation within an Organic Matrix |
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324 | (2) |
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15.6 Particle-Based Crystallization |
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326 | (2) |
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15.7 Conclusions and Future Applications |
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328 | (6) |
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330 | (1) |
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330 | (4) |
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16 Liquid STEM for Studying Biological Function in Whole Cells |
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334 | (22) |
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334 | (1) |
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16.2 Liquid STEM Technology |
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334 | (5) |
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16.3 Studying Membrane Proteins in Whole Cells in Liquid |
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339 | (5) |
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16.4 Live Cell Liquid STEM |
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344 | (3) |
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16.5 Gold Nanoparticle Uptake Studied in Whole Cells |
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347 | (1) |
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16.6 Comparison with Cryo-TEM |
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348 | (2) |
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16.7 Conclusions and Outlook |
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350 | (6) |
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351 | (1) |
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351 | (5) |
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17 Visualizing Macromolecules in Liquid at the Nanoscale |
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356 | (15) |
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17.1 Introduction: The Critical Need for Imaging Dynamic Events in Life Sciences |
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356 | (1) |
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17.2 Recent Technical Advances: How Liquid Cell TEM Can Address This Critical Need |
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357 | (1) |
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17.3 The Affinity Capture Technique to Tether Unlabeled Biological Complexes onto SixNy |
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357 | (4) |
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17.4 Correlative Nanoscale Imaging: What Information Can We Learn from Combining Liquid Cell TEM and Cryo-EM? |
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361 | (7) |
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17.5 New Directions: Use of Direct Electron CMOS Detectors to Acquire "Molecular Movies" of Fundamental Processes |
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368 | (3) |
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369 | (1) |
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369 | (2) |
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18 Application of Liquid Cell Microscopy to Study Function of Muscle Proteins |
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371 | (20) |
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18.1 Introduction: Our Motivation for Liquid Cell Microscopy of Muscle Contraction |
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371 | (4) |
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18.2 Experimental Methods for Recording Myosin Head Movement |
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375 | (6) |
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18.3 ATP-Induced Movement of Individual Myosin Heads |
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381 | (7) |
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18.4 Conclusions and Outlook |
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388 | (3) |
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389 | (1) |
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389 | (2) |
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391 | (110) |
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19 High Resolution Imaging in the Graphene Liquid Cell |
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393 | (15) |
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19.1 Introduction to Graphene Liquid Cells: Advantages, Opportunities, and Fabrication Methods |
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393 | (3) |
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19.2 Studying Growth Mechanisms in Atomic Detail by GLC-TEM |
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396 | (4) |
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19.3 Applications of GLC-TEM in Biological Studies |
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400 | (4) |
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404 | (4) |
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406 | (2) |
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20 Analytical Electron Microscopy during In Situ Liquid Cell Studies |
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408 | (26) |
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408 | (5) |
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20.2 Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy |
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413 | (7) |
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20.3 X-ray Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy |
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420 | (11) |
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431 | (3) |
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432 | (1) |
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432 | (2) |
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21 Spherical and Chromatic Aberration Correction for Atomic-Resolution Liquid Cell Electron Microscopy |
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434 | (22) |
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434 | (1) |
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21.2 Spherical Aberration Correction in the TEM |
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435 | (9) |
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21.3 Spherical Aberration Correction in STEM |
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444 | (2) |
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21.4 Chromatic Aberration Correction in the TEM |
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446 | (6) |
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452 | (4) |
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453 | (1) |
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453 | (3) |
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22 The Potential for Imaging Dynamic Processes in Liquids with High Temporal Resolution |
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456 | (20) |
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456 | (1) |
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22.2 Why Do We Need Better Temporal Resolution? |
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457 | (3) |
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22.3 Hardware/Software Developments for Fast Temporal Resolution |
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460 | (6) |
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22.4 Materials and Biological Examples |
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466 | (5) |
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471 | (5) |
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471 | (1) |
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472 | (4) |
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23 Future Prospects for Biomolecular, Biomimetic, and Biomaterials Research Enabled by New Liquid Cell Electron Microscopy Techniques |
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476 | (25) |
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476 | (1) |
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23.2 Visualizing Protein Structure in Liquid Water at High Resolution |
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476 | (3) |
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23.3 Elucidating Fundamental Biomineralization Mechanisms via In Vivo Imaging |
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479 | (4) |
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23.4 Visualizing Electromagnetic Fields and Nanoparticle Interactions in Biomolecular Systems |
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483 | (5) |
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488 | (3) |
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23.6 Mesocrystal Formation |
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491 | (4) |
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495 | (6) |
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495 | (1) |
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495 | (6) |
Index |
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501 | |