The length scales on which materials microstructures are being
formed, grown, and even designed are becoming increasingly small and
increasingly three-dimensional. For such complex structures
two-dimensional transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis is
often inadequate and occasionally misleading. One approach to this
problem is the modification of electron tomography techniques,
developed for structural biology, for use in materials science.
Energy-Filtered (EF) TEM elemental distribution images approximate to
true projections of structure, and, as such, can be used to reconstruct
the three-dimensional distribution of chemical species. A sample holder
has been modified to allow the high tilt (±60°) required for
tomography and a semiautomatic acquisition script designed to manage
energy-loss acquisition. Tilt series data sets have been acquired from
two widely different experimental systems, Cr carbides in 316 stainless
steel and magnetite nanocrystals in magnetotactic bacteria,
demonstrating single- and multiple-element tomography. It is shown that
both elemental maps and jump-ratio images are suitable for
reconstruction, despite the effects of diffraction contrast in the
former and thickness changes in the latter. It is concluded that the
image contrast, signal, and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) are key to the
achievable reconstruction quality and, as such, the technique may be of
limited value for high energy loss/small inelastic cross section
edges.