Jo Verbeeck
University of Antwerp
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Featured researches published by Jo Verbeeck.
Nature | 2010
Jo Verbeeck; H. Tian; P. Schattschneider
Vortex beams (also known as beams with a phase singularity) consist of spiralling wavefronts that give rise to angular momentum around the propagation direction. Vortex photon beams are widely used in applications such as optical tweezers to manipulate micrometre-sized particles and in micro-motors to provide angular momentum, improving channel capacity in optical and radio-wave information transfer, astrophysics and so on. Very recently, an experimental realization of vortex beams formed of electrons was demonstrated. Here we describe the creation of vortex electron beams, making use of a versatile holographic reconstruction technique in a transmission electron microscope. This technique is a reproducible method of creating vortex electron beams in a conventional electron microscope. We demonstrate how they may be used in electron energy-loss spectroscopy to detect the magnetic state of materials and describe their properties. Our results show that electron vortex beams hold promise for new applications, in particular for analysing and manipulating nanomaterials, and can be easily produced.
Ultramicroscopy | 2009
S. Van Aert; Jo Verbeeck; Rolf Erni; Sara Bals; M. Luysberg; D. Van Dyck; G. Van Tendeloo
A model-based method is proposed to relatively quantify the chemical composition of atomic columns using high angle annular dark field (HAADF) scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) images. The method is based on a quantification of the total intensity of the scattered electrons for the individual atomic columns using statistical parameter estimation theory. In order to apply this theory, a model is required describing the image contrast of the HAADF STEM images. Therefore, a simple, effective incoherent model has been assumed which takes the probe intensity profile into account. The scattered intensities can then be estimated by fitting this model to an experimental HAADF STEM image. These estimates are used as a performance measure to distinguish between different atomic column types and to identify the nature of unknown columns with good accuracy and precision using statistical hypothesis testing. The reliability of the method is supported by means of simulated HAADF STEM images as well as a combination of experimental images and electron energy-loss spectra. It is experimentally shown that statistically meaningful information on the composition of individual columns can be obtained even if the difference in averaged atomic number Z is only 3. Using this method, quantitative mapping at atomic resolution using HAADF STEM images only has become possible without the need of simultaneously recorded electron energy loss spectra.
Small | 2011
Yu Li; Haiyan Tan; Xiao-Yu Yang; Bart Goris; Jo Verbeeck; Sara Bals; Pierre Colson; Rudi Cloots; Gustaaf Van Tendeloo; Bao-Lian Su
Very uniform and well shaped Mn₃O₄ nano-octahedra are synthesized using a simple hydrothermal method under the help of polyethylene glycol (PEG200) as a reductant and shape-directing agent. The nano-octahedra formation mechanism is monitored. The shape and crystal orientation of the nanoparticles is reconstructed by scanning electron microscopy and electron tomography, which reveals that the nano-octahedra only selectively expose {101} facets at the external surfaces. The magnetic testing demonstrates that the Mn₃O₄ nano-octahedra exhibit anomalous magnetic properties: the Mn₃O₄ nano-octahedra around 150 nm show a similar Curie temperature and blocking temperature to Mn₃O₄ nanoparticles with 10 nm size because of the vertical axis of [001] plane and the exposed {101} facets. With these Mn₃O₄ nano-octahedra as a catalyst, the photodecomposition of rhodamine B is evaluated and it is found that the photodecomposition activity of Mn₃O₄ nano-octahedra is much superior to that of commercial Mn₃O₄ powders. The anomalous magnetic properties and high superior photodecomposition activity of well shaped Mn₃O₄ nano-octahedra should be related to the special shape of the nanoparticles and the abundantly exposed {101} facets at the external surfaces. Therefore, the shape preference can largely broaden the application of the Mn₃O₄ nano-octahedra.
Advanced Materials | 2012
Gustaaf Van Tendeloo; Sara Bals; Sandra Van Aert; Jo Verbeeck; Dirk Van Dyck
The idea of this Review is to introduce newly developed possibilities of advanced electron microscopy to the materials science community. Over the last decade, electron microscopy has evolved into a full analytical tool, able to provide atomic scale information on the position, nature, and even the valency atoms. This information is classically obtained in two dimensions (2D), but can now also be obtained in 3D. We show examples of applications in the field of nanoparticles and interfaces.
Nature Materials | 2016
Zhaoliang Liao; Mark Huijben; Zhicheng Zhong; Nicolas Gauquelin; S. Macke; R. J. Green; S. Van Aert; Jo Verbeeck; G. Van Tendeloo; K. Held; G. A. Sawatzky; Gertjan Koster; Guus Rijnders
Controlled in-plane rotation of the magnetic easy axis in manganite heterostructures by tailoring the interface oxygen network could allow the development of correlated oxide-based magnetic tunnelling junctions with non-collinear magnetization, with possible practical applications as miniaturized high-switching-speed magnetic random access memory (MRAM) devices. Here, we demonstrate how to manipulate magnetic and electronic anisotropic properties in manganite heterostructures by engineering the oxygen network on the unit-cell level. The strong oxygen octahedral coupling is found to transfer the octahedral rotation, present in the NdGaO3 (NGO) substrate, to the La2/3Sr1/3MnO3 (LSMO) film in the interface region. This causes an unexpected realignment of the magnetic easy axis along the short axis of the LSMO unit cell as well as the presence of a giant anisotropic transport in these ultrathin LSMO films. As a result we possess control of the lateral magnetic and electronic anisotropies by atomic-scale design of the oxygen octahedral rotation.
Nature Materials | 2015
Yunzhong Chen; Felix Trier; T. Wijnands; R. J. Green; Nicolas Gauquelin; Ricardo Egoavil; Dennis Valbjørn Christensen; Gertjan Koster; Mark Huijben; N. Bovet; S. Macke; F. He; Ronny Sutarto; Niels Hessel Andersen; J. A. Sulpizio; M. Honig; Guenevere E. D. K. Prawiroatmodjo; Thomas Jespersen; Søren Linderoth; S. Ilani; Jo Verbeeck; G. Van Tendeloo; Guus Rijnders; G. A. Sawatzky; Nini Pryds
Two-dimensional electron gases (2DEGs) formed at the interface of insulating complex oxides promise the development of all-oxide electronic devices. These 2DEGs involve many-body interactions that give rise to a variety of physical phenomena such as superconductivity, magnetism, tunable metal-insulator transitions and phase separation. Increasing the mobility of the 2DEG, however, remains a major challenge. Here, we show that the electron mobility is enhanced by more than two orders of magnitude by inserting a single-unit-cell insulating layer of polar La(1-x)Sr(x)MnO3 (x = 0, 1/8, and 1/3) at the interface between disordered LaAlO3 and crystalline SrTiO3 produced at room temperature. Resonant X-ray spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy show that the manganite layer undergoes unambiguous electronic reconstruction, leading to modulation doping of such atomically engineered complex oxide heterointerfaces. At low temperatures, the modulation-doped 2DEG exhibits Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations and fingerprints of the quantum Hall effect, demonstrating unprecedented high mobility and low electron density.
Nature Communications | 2014
Knut Müller; Florian F. Krause; Armand Béché; Marco Schowalter; Galioit; Stefan Löffler; Jo Verbeeck; Josef Zweck; P. Schattschneider; A. Rosenauer
By focusing electrons on probes with a diameter of 50 pm, aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) is currently crossing the border to probing subatomic details. A major challenge is the measurement of atomic electric fields using differential phase contrast (DPC) microscopy, traditionally exploiting the concept of a field-induced shift of diffraction patterns. Here we present a simplified quantum theoretical interpretation of DPC. This enables us to calculate the momentum transferred to the STEM probe from diffracted intensities recorded on a pixel array instead of conventional segmented bright-field detectors. The methodical development yielding atomic electric field, charge and electron density is performed using simulations for binary GaN as an ideal model system. We then present a detailed experimental study of SrTiO3 yielding atomic electric fields, validated by comprehensive simulations. With this interpretation and upgraded instrumentation, STEM is capable of quantifying atomic electric fields and high-contrast imaging of light atoms.
Nature Physics | 2014
Armand Béché; Ruben Van Boxem; Gustaaf Van Tendeloo; Jo Verbeeck
Magnetic monopoles continue to be elusive. However, an experiment now shows that the interaction of an electron beam with the tip of a nanoscopically thin magnetic needle—a close approximation to a magnetic monopole field—generates an electron vortex state, as expected for a true magnetic monopole field.
Angewandte Chemie | 2013
Sergey V. Ovsyannikov; Artem M. Abakumov; Alexander A. Tsirlin; Walter Schnelle; Ricardo Egoavil; Jo Verbeeck; Gustaaf Van Tendeloo; Konstantin Glazyrin; Michael Hanfland; Leonid Dubrovinsky
Among complex oxides, perovskite-based manganites play a special role in science and technology. They demonstrate colossal magnetoresistance, and can be employed as memory and resistive switching elements or multiferroics. The perovskite structure ABO3 has two different cation sites: B-sites that are octahedrally coordinated by oxygen, and cuboctahedrally-coordinated (often heavily distorted) Asites. The magnetic and transport properties of perovskite manganites are largely determined by the Mn O Mn interactions in the perovskite framework of corner-sharing MnO6 octahedra. Although the A cations do not directly participate in these interactions, they control the Mn valence and the geometry of the Mn O Mn bonds. Complex phenomena, such as charge and orbital ordering, often accompany chemical substitutions on the A-site. Requirements on formal charge and ionic radius are usually different for cations adopting theA or B positions and prevent A/B mixing. Small and often highly charged transition-metal B-cations are unfavorable for the large 12coordinated A-site. Partial filling of the A-position with transition metals is, nevertheless, possible in a unique class of A-site ordered perovskites AA’3B4O12 (where A= alkali, alkali-earth, rare-earth, Pb, or Bi cations, A’=Cu or Mn, and B= transition metals, Ga, Ge, Sb, or Sn). A key ingredient of such compounds is the A’ cation that should be prone to a first-order Jahn–Teller effect (Cu or Mn). An oxygen environment suitable for such transition-metal cations at the A’ position is created by the aaa octahedral tilt system (in Glazer s notation) with a notably large magnitude of the tilt (for example, in CaCu3Ti4O12 the Ti O Ti bond angle is only 140.78). The tilt creates a square-planar anion coordination, favorable for Jahn–Teller-active A’ cations. The ap= ffiffiffi
Advanced Functional Materials | 2012
Hans Boschker; Jo Verbeeck; Ricardo Egoavil; Sara Bals; G. Van Tendeloo; Mark Huijben; Evert Pieter Houwman; Gertjan Koster; David H.A. Blank; Guus Rijnders
When comparing a set of La0.67Sr0.33MnO3 (LSMO) samples, the Curie temperature (TC) of the samples is an important figure of merit for the sample quality. Therefore, a reliable method to determine TC is required. Here, a method based on the analysis of the magnetization loops is proposed.