The separation of diffraction effects from phase contrast is a major challenge for differential phase contrast (DPC) imaging in scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM). The application of electron beam precession has previously been proven successful in homogenizing the direct beam and improving the imaging of both long-range electric and magnetic fields. However, magnetic STEM-DPC imaging performed in a low magnification (LM) STEM mode suffers from significant aberrations of the probe forming lens and the consequent impediment of small precession angles. By investigating the application of precession path segmentation to LM-STEM precessed scans for the imaging of LSMO and FeAl thin film samples, the initially reported benefits of precession were discovered to be less substantial than originally assumed. The segmentation methodology reveals that precession induced beam phase shifts account for a large part of the DPC induction profile smoothing, and the precession path is non-circular, leading to streaking artifacts in the reconstructed induction maps.
Keywords: 4D-STEM; Differential phase contrast; Magnetic thin film imaging; Precession electron diffraction.
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