Revisiting Compositional Accuracy of Carbides Using a Decreased Detector Efficiency in a LEAP 6000 XR Atom Probe Instrument
Journal article, 2024

The accuracy of carbon composition measurement of carbide precipitates in steel or other alloys is limited by the evaporation characteristics of carbon and the performance of current detector systems. Carbon evaporates in a higher fraction as clustered ions leading to detector pile-up during so-called multiple hits. To achieve higher accuracy, a grid was positioned behind the local electrode, reducing the detection efficiency from 52 to 7% and thereby reducing the fraction of multi-hit events. This work confirms the preferential loss of carbon due to detector pile-up. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the newer generation of commercial atom probe instruments displays somewhat higher discrepancy of carbon composition than previous generations. The reason for this might be different laser-matter interaction leading to less metal ions in multi-hit events. Graphical Abstract

detection efficiency

detector pile-up

atom probe tomography

carbides

Author

Severin Jakob

Chalmers, Physics, Microstructure Physics

Mattias Thuvander

Chalmers, Physics, Microstructure Physics

Microscopy and Microanalysis

1431-9276 (ISSN) 1435-8115 (eISSN)

Vol. In Press

Hydrogen trapping by carbides in steel

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2021-05072), 2021-12-01 -- 2025-11-30.

Subject Categories

Materials Engineering

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1093/mam/ozae069

PubMed

39083425

More information

Latest update

8/9/2024 9