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The following was posted by mistake in the "Off topic" forum. I'm interested in the same general question so I'm reposting it here so it may receive more attention.-Don ChernoffDon Chernoff, Ph.D., President, Advanced Surface Microscopy, Incwww.asmicro.com [business activities since 1990: analytical services in AFM, AFM probes, consulting, training, calibration and test specimens, calibration and measurement software, used NanoScope equipment.]
===Quote of Fabrizio's post===
Dear friends,
This is surprising. Usually the XRD will tend to underestimate the particles size, no overestimate it.
If you see features of 2 nm height 15nm across, they are probably spheres. You could do TEM to check (although they are pretty small, you need a reasonably good TEM).
I should think the most likely explanation is that the 2nm spheres are there, but are not representative of the samples, and you have lots of bigger stuff in the sample that was not imaged.
The other possibility is that the 2nm features are not actually silver, but some (non crystalline) contaminant.
Pete.
The shape factor can be addressed by embedding the particles in conductive epoxy followed by STM imaging of polished (= flat) sample. The particles should theoretically be scattered and oriented randomly. The randomness can also be addressed by the trimming and polishing of the same sample under the angle of your choice (45-90 degree should be sufficient for that).
The shape distortion artefacts could be caused by the probe-sample-substrate interaction. The sample was imaged in the "mechanical" AC AFM mode. Switching into physically different, for example "electrical" mode like STM / different substrate / probe or even different imaging conditions could be useful too. I would probably start with changing the imaging mode (STM).
Please let me know how it went or just share your screen in Skype when you see me online: http://confocal-manawatu.pbworks.com/w/page/23665663/Dmitry%20Sokolov
Cheers,Dmitry
MIAWiki Knowledge Network /Online Consultancy on Microscopy and Image Analysis