Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Timothy J. Pennycook is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Timothy J. Pennycook.


Nature Materials | 2014

Scalable production of large quantities of defect-free few-layer graphene by shear exfoliation in liquids

Keith R. Paton; Eswaraiah Varrla; Claudia Backes; Ronan J. Smith; Umar Khan; Arlene O’Neill; Conor S. Boland; Mustafa Lotya; Oana M. Istrate; Paul J. King; Thomas M. Higgins; Sebastian Barwich; Peter May; Pawel Puczkarski; Iftikhar Ahmed; Matthias Moebius; Henrik Pettersson; Edmund Long; João Coelho; Sean O’Brien; Eva McGuire; Beatriz Mendoza Sanchez; Georg S. Duesberg; Niall McEvoy; Timothy J. Pennycook; Clive Downing; Alison Crossley; Valeria Nicolosi; Jonathan N. Coleman

To progress from the laboratory to commercial applications, it will be necessary to develop industrially scalable methods to produce large quantities of defect-free graphene. Here we show that high-shear mixing of graphite in suitable stabilizing liquids results in large-scale exfoliation to give dispersions of graphene nanosheets. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy show the exfoliated flakes to be unoxidized and free of basal-plane defects. We have developed a simple model that shows exfoliation to occur once the local shear rate exceeds 10(4) s(-1). By fully characterizing the scaling behaviour of the graphene production rate, we show that exfoliation can be achieved in liquid volumes from hundreds of millilitres up to hundreds of litres and beyond. The graphene produced by this method performs well in applications from composites to conductive coatings. This method can be applied to exfoliate BN, MoS2 and a range of other layered crystals.


Nature | 2010

Atom-by-atom structural and chemical analysis by annular dark-field electron microscopy

Ondrej L. Krivanek; Matthew F. Chisholm; Valeria Nicolosi; Timothy J. Pennycook; G.J. Corbin; Niklas Dellby; Matthew F. Murfitt; Christopher S. Own; Z.S. Szilagyi; Mark P. Oxley; Sokrates T. Pantelides; Stephen J. Pennycook

Direct imaging and chemical identification of all the atoms in a material with unknown three-dimensional structure would constitute a very powerful general analysis tool. Transmission electron microscopy should in principle be able to fulfil this role, as many scientists including Feynman realized early on. It images matter with electrons that scatter strongly from individual atoms and whose wavelengths are about 50 times smaller than an atom. Recently the technique has advanced greatly owing to the introduction of aberration-corrected optics. However, neither electron microscopy nor any other experimental technique has yet been able to resolve and identify all the atoms in a non-periodic material consisting of several atomic species. Here we show that annular dark-field imaging in an aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscope optimized for low voltage operation can resolve and identify the chemical type of every atom in monolayer hexagonal boron nitride that contains substitutional defects. Three types of atomic substitutions were found and identified: carbon substituting for boron, carbon substituting for nitrogen, and oxygen substituting for nitrogen. The substitutions caused in-plane distortions in the boron nitride monolayer of about 0.1 Å magnitude, which were directly resolved, and verified by density functional theory calculations. The results demonstrate that atom-by-atom structural and chemical analysis of all radiation-damage-resistant atoms present in, and on top of, ultra-thin sheets has now become possible.


Advanced Structural and Chemical Imaging | 2015

Smart Align—a new tool for robust non-rigid registration of scanning microscope data

Lewys Jones; Hao Yang; Timothy J. Pennycook; Matthew J. Marshall; Sandra Van Aert; Nigel D. Browning; Martin R. Castell; Peter D. Nellist

Many microscopic investigations of materials may benefit from the recording of multiple successive images. This can include techniques common to several types of microscopy such as frame averaging to improve signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) or time series to study dynamic processes or more specific applications. In the scanning transmission electron microscope, this might include focal series for optical sectioning or aberration measurement, beam damage studies or camera-length series to study the effects of strain; whilst in the scanning tunnelling microscope, this might include bias-voltage series to probe local electronic structure. Whatever the application, such investigations must begin with the careful alignment of these data stacks, an operation that is not always trivial. In addition, the presence of low-frequency scanning distortions can introduce intra-image shifts to the data. Here, we describe an improved automated method of performing non-rigid registration customised for the challenges unique to scanned microscope data specifically addressing the issues of low-SNR data, images containing a large proportion of crystalline material and/or local features of interest such as dislocations or edges. Careful attention has been paid to artefact testing of the non-rigid registration method used, and the importance of this registration for the quantitative interpretation of feature intensities and positions is evaluated.


Ultramicroscopy | 2015

Efficient phase contrast imaging in STEM using a pixelated detector. Part 1: Experimental demonstration at atomic resolution

Timothy J. Pennycook; Andrew R. Lupini; Hao Yang; Matthew F. Murfitt; Lewys Jones; Peter D. Nellist

We demonstrate a method to achieve high efficiency phase contrast imaging in aberration corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) with a pixelated detector. The pixelated detector is used to record the Ronchigram as a function of probe position which is then analyzed with ptychography. Ptychography has previously been used to provide super-resolution beyond the diffraction limit of the optics, alongside numerically correcting for spherical aberration. Here we rely on a hardware aberration corrector to eliminate aberrations, but use the pixelated detector data set to utilize the largest possible volume of Fourier space to create high efficiency phase contrast images. The use of ptychography to diagnose the effects of chromatic aberration is also demonstrated. Finally, the four dimensional dataset is used to compare different bright field detector configurations from the same scan for a sample of bilayer graphene. Our method of high efficiency ptychography produces the clearest images, while annular bright field produces almost no contrast for an in-focus aberration-corrected probe.


Ultramicroscopy | 2013

Probe integrated scattering cross sections in the analysis of atomic resolution HAADF STEM images

Katherine E. MacArthur; Timothy J. Pennycook; Eiji Okunishi; A.J. D'Alfonso; N.R. Lugg; L. J. Allen; Peter D. Nellist

The physical basis for using a probe-position integrated cross section (PICS) for a single column of atoms as an effective way to compare simulation and experiment in high-angle annular dark-field (HAADF) scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) is described, and the use of PICS in order to make quantitative use of image intensities is evaluated. It is based upon the calibration of the detector and the measurement of scattered intensities. Due to the predominantly incoherent nature of HAADF STEM, it is found to be robust to parameters that affect probe size and shape such as defocus and source coherence. The main imaging parameter dependencies are on detector angle and accelerating voltage, which are well known. The robustness to variation in other parameters allows for a quantitative comparison of experimental data and simulation without the need to fit parameters. By demonstrating the application of the PICS to the chemical identification of single atoms in a heterogeneous catalyst and in thin, layered-materials, we explore some of the experimental considerations when using this approach.


Nano Letters | 2012

Dynamic fluctuations in ultrasmall nanocrystals induce white light emission

Timothy J. Pennycook; James R. McBride; Sandra J. Rosenthal; Stephen J. Pennycook; Sokrates T. Pantelides

Individual ultrasmall CdSe nanocrystals have recently been found to emit white light, but the ultimate origin of the phenomenon has remained elusive. Here we use a combination of state-of-the-art experiment and theory to show that excitation sets the ultrasmall nanocrystals into a fluxional state. Their energy gaps vary continuously on a femtosecond time scale, so that even an individual nanocrystal can emit across the entire visual range. In addition, we observe the outer layers of the larger monochromatic emitting nanocrystals to be fluxional. Such fluxionality should be considered when optimizing nanocrystals for applications. Thus, small is indeed different, but ultrasmall is different yet again.


Ultramicroscopy | 2015

Efficient phase contrast imaging in STEM using a pixelated detector. Part II: optimisation of imaging conditions.

Hao Yang; Timothy J. Pennycook; Peter D. Nellist

In Part I of this series of two papers, we demonstrated the formation of a high efficiency phase-contrast image at atomic resolution using a pixelated detector in the scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM) with ptychography. In this paper we explore the technique more quantitatively using theory and simulations. Compared to other STEM phase contrast modes including annular bright field (ABF) and differential phase contrast (DPC), we show that the ptychographic phase reconstruction method using pixelated detectors offers the highest contrast transfer efficiency and superior low dose performance. Applying the ptychographic reconstruction method to DPC segmented detectors also improves the detector contrast transfer and results in less noisy images than DPC images formed using difference signals. We also find that using a minimum array of 16×16 pixels is sufficient to provide the highest signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for imaging beam sensitive weak phase objects. Finally, the convergence angle can be adjusted to enhance the contrast transfer based on the spatial frequencies of the specimen under study.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2015

Size and Purity Control of HPHT Nanodiamonds down to 1 nm

Stepan Stehlik; Marian Varga; Martin Ledinsky; Vít Jirásek; Anna Artemenko; Halyna Kozak; Lukáš Ondič; Viera Skakalova; Giacomo Argentero; Timothy J. Pennycook; Jannik C. Meyer; A. Fejfar; Alexander Kromka; Bohuslav Rezek

High-pressure high-temperature (HPHT) nanodiamonds originate from grinding of diamond microcrystals obtained by HPHT synthesis. Here we report on a simple two-step approach to obtain as small as 1.1 nm HPHT nanodiamonds of excellent purity and crystallinity, which are among the smallest artificially prepared nanodiamonds ever shown and characterized. Moreover we provide experimental evidence of diamond stability down to 1 nm. Controlled annealing at 450 °C in air leads to efficient purification from the nondiamond carbon (shells and dots), as evidenced by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, photoluminescence spectroscopy, and scanning transmission electron microscopy. Annealing at 500 °C promotes, besides of purification, also size reduction of nanodiamonds down to ∼1 nm. Comparably short (1 h) centrifugation of the nanodiamonds aqueous colloidal solution ensures separation of the sub-10 nm fraction. Calculations show that an asymmetry of Raman diamond peak of sub-10 nm HPHT nanodiamonds can be well explained by modified phonon confinement model when the actual particle size distribution is taken into account. In contrast, larger Raman peak asymmetry commonly observed in Raman spectra of detonation nanodiamonds is mainly attributed to defects rather than to the phonon confinement. Thus, the obtained characteristics reflect high material quality including nanoscale effects in sub-10 nm HPHT nanodiamonds prepared by the presented method.


ACS Nano | 2013

Probing the bonding in nitrogen-doped graphene using electron energy loss spectroscopy.

Rebecca J. Nicholls; Adrian T. Murdock; Joshua Tsang; Jude Britton; Timothy J. Pennycook; Antal Adolf Koós; Peter D. Nellist; Nicole Grobert; Jonathan R. Yates

Precise control of graphene properties is an essential step toward the realization of future graphene devices. Defects, such as individual nitrogen atoms, can strongly influence the electronic structure of graphene. Therefore, state-of-the-art characterization techniques, in conjunction with modern modeling tools, are necessary to identify these defects and fully understand the synthesized material. We have directly visualized individual substitutional nitrogen dopant atoms in graphene using scanning transmission electron microscopy and conducted complementary electron energy loss spectroscopy experiments and modeling which demonstrates the influence of the nitrogen atom on the carbon K-edge.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2014

A nano-disperse ferritin-core mimetic that efficiently corrects anemia without luminal iron redox activity

Jonathan J. Powell; Sylvaine F. A. Bruggraber; Nuno Faria; Lynsey K. Poots; Nicole Hondow; Timothy J. Pennycook; Gladys O. Latunde-Dada; Robert J. Simpson; Andy Brown; Dora I. A. Pereira

The 2-5 nm Fe(III) oxo-hydroxide core of ferritin is less ordered and readily bioavailable compared to its pure synthetic analogue, ferrihydrite. We report the facile synthesis of tartrate-modified, nano-disperse ferrihydrite of small primary particle size, but with enlarged or strained lattice structure (~ 2.7 Å for the main Bragg peak versus 2.6 Å for synthetic ferrihydrite). Analysis indicated that co-precipitation conditions can be achieved for tartrate inclusion into the developing ferrihydrite particles, retarding both growth and crystallization and favoring stabilization of the cross-linked polymeric structure. In murine models, gastrointestinal uptake was independent of luminal Fe(III) reduction to Fe(II) and, yet, absorption was equivalent to that of ferrous sulphate, efficiently correcting the induced anemia. This process may model dietary Fe(III) absorption and potentially provide a side effect-free form of cheap supplemental iron. From the Clinical Editor Small size tartrate-modified, nano-disperse ferrihydrite was used for efficient gastrointestinal delivery of soluble Fe(III) without the risk for free radical generation in murine models. This method may provide a potentially side effect-free form iron supplementation.

Collaboration


Dive into the Timothy J. Pennycook's collaboration.

Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge