Electron energy loss spectroscopy database synthesis and automation of core-loss edge recognition by deep-learning neural networks

arXiv:2209.13026v18 citationsh-index: 32
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the bottleneck of processing speed in material analysis for researchers, though it is incremental as it applies existing deep learning methods to a specific domain problem.

The authors tackled the problem of automating core-loss edge recognition in electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) spectra, which is traditionally slow and human-dependent, by proposing a CNN-BiLSTM neural network and achieved a high accuracy of 94.9% in detection and elemental identification.

The ionization edges encoded in the electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) spectra enable advanced material analysis including composition analyses and elemental quantifications. The development of the parallel EELS instrument and fast, sensitive detectors have greatly improved the acquisition speed of EELS spectra. However, the traditional way of core-loss edge recognition is experience based and human labor dependent, which limits the processing speed. So far, the low signal-noise ratio and the low jump ratio of the core-loss edges on the raw EELS spectra have been challenging for the automation of edge recognition. In this work, a convolutional-bidirectional long short-term memory neural network (CNN-BiLSTM) is proposed to automate the detection and elemental identification of core-loss edges from raw spectra. An EELS spectral database is synthesized by using our forward model to assist in the training and validation of the neural network. To make the synthesized spectra resemble the real spectra, we collected a large library of experimentally acquired EELS core edges. In synthesize the training library, the edges are modeled by fitting the multi-gaussian model to the real edges from experiments, and the noise and instrumental imperfectness are simulated and added. The well-trained CNN-BiLSTM network is tested against both the simulated spectra and real spectra collected from experiments. The high accuracy of the network, 94.9 %, proves that, without complicated preprocessing of the raw spectra, the proposed CNN-BiLSTM network achieves the automation of core-loss edge recognition for EELS spectra with high accuracy.

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