Abstract
The relation between the energy-dependent particle and wave descriptions of electron–matter interactions on the nanoscale was analyzed by measuring the delocalization of an evanescent field from energy-filtered amplitude images of sample/vacuum interfaces with a special aberration-corrected electron microscope. The spatial field extension coincided with the energy-dependent self-coherence length of propagating wave packets that obeyed the time-dependent Schrödinger equation, and underwent a Goos–Hänchen shift. The findings support the view that wave packets are created by self-interferences during coherent–inelastic Coulomb interactions with a decoherence phase close to ∆ϕ = 0.5 rad. Due to a strictly reciprocal dependence on energy, the wave packets shrink below atomic dimensions for electron energy losses beyond 1000 eV, and thus appear particle-like. Consequently, our observations inevitably include pulse-like wave propagations that stimulate structural dynamics in nanomaterials at any electron energy loss, which can be exploited to unravel time-dependent structure–function relationships on the nanoscale. © 2023 by the authors.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 971 |
| Journal | Nanomaterials |
| Volume | 13 |
| Issue number | 6 |
| Online published | 8 Mar 2023 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Mar 2023 |
Research Keywords
- coherence
- electron beam–sample interactions
- functional behavior
- Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle
- inelastic scattering
- self-interference
- time-dependent Schrödinger equation
- wave packets
Publisher's Copyright Statement
- This full text is made available under CC-BY 4.0. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/