Title of article :
Material-specific contrast in the ESEM and its application
in dentistry
Author/Authors :
N. Franz، نويسنده , , M. O. Ahlers، نويسنده , , A. Abdullah، نويسنده , ,
H. Hohenberg، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
The Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope
(ESEM) equipped with a Gaseous Secondary Electron
Detector (GSED) was used to image and analyze materials
of different density, composition and structure applied in
dentistry. Under ESEM conditions (at a H2O vapor pressure
of 1–10 Torr) the hydrated surfaces of native teeth, which
were coated with different polymers, generated a topographic
and also a material specific contrast. The backscattered
(BSE) and the secondary (SE) electrons involved
into the imaging process produced a cascade-dependent
mixed signal at the GSED. The material-specific contrast,
generated by the BSE cascade, depends mainly on the
atomic number z of the investigated material. The topographic
contrast is based principally on the SE cascade. For
the exact differentiation of the specific signal components
inside of the ESEM, we additionally used a backscattered
electron detector (BSED), the application of which allowed
us to detect pure BSEs and no signals from cascadedependent
electrons. Conventional scanning electron
microscopy (CSEM) used to investigate and image the
structures of teeth and applied dental materials needs timeconsuming
and often artifact-inducing preparation steps
before the partially hydrated specimen can be investigated,
whereas the ESEM technology permits the imaging of
hydrated organic structures with no prior specimen preparation.
In the ESEM the interfaces between the hydrated
organically structured tooth surfaces and the artificially
applied polymer materials with its specific bond characteristics
can be analyzed very fast and repeatedly (e.g. after
etching series) at a reproducible high quality level.
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science