Abstract

It is only 13 years since the first commercial scanning electron microscope, the Cambridge Stereoscan, was introduced. Since then the growth of scanning electron microscopy (SEM) has been so rapid, that access to such a microscope has become virtually essential for scientists and technologists who work with materials in any form – geologists, biologists, engineers or forensic scientists – as well as the more obvious physicists, chemists and materials scientists.

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