The UE49-PGM SPEEM beam line hosts a dedicated photo-electron emission microscope (PEEM) devoted to element-selective and magnetic-sensitive space resolved investigations. SPEEM is designed for studying sub-100nm scale magnetoelectronic devices by combining a photoemission electron microscope (PEEM) with a dedicated microfocus beamline offering full x-ray polarization control. The synergy between the microscopy capabilities of the PEEM and the polarization control of synchrotron radiation makes X-PEEM the ideal tool for spatially resolved and element selective investigation of nanostructures by means of chemical maps (XAS) and magnetic imaging (XMCD and XLD).
Selected Applications:
SPEEM TimePix3 detector © Volker Mai /HZB
PEEM, X-ray Microscopy, ARPES, XPS, Time-resolved PES, XMCD, XMLD, Time-resolved absorption
depends on experiment - please discuss with Instrument Scientist
Magnetic nanostructures are at the heart of modern data storage technology. Typical dimensions of magnetic bits are in the sub-100nm region. In addition novel magnetoelectronics devices such as magnetic random access memory junctions are operated on the sub-100nm m scale. An understanding magnetic properties of such low-dimensional structures is only accessible to spectro-microscopy tools capable of appropriate lateral resolution. This goal is achieved by combining a novel spin-resolved photoemission microscope (SPEEM) with a dedicated microfocus PGM beamline with full x-ray polarization control (UE49-PGM SPEEM).
The synergy between the microscopy capabilities of the PEEM and the polarization control of synchrotron radiation makes of X-PEEM the ideal tool for space resolved and element selective investigation of nanostructures by means of chemical maps (XAS) and magnetic imaging (XMCD and XLD).
For a detailed description of the experimental station as well as for an overview of the experimental possibilities of our microscope, please visit the following link XPEEM to get more information about sample holders and sample environment, possibilities for in-situ sample preparation and time-resolved experiments.