20 March 2026
Hydrogen plays a vital role in everything from clean fuel technologies to semiconductor engineering. However, its exceptionally low mass and weak interaction with standard microscopy probes make it notoriously difficult to image directly.
A recent research article published in Applied Physics Letters details a new non-destructive method to finally visualize this elusive element on a microscopic scale.
A team of researchers has successfully obtained the first direct, spatially resolved images of hydrogen-passivated silicon surfaces across large, millimeter-scale areas. To achieve this, they utilized scanning helium microscopy (SHeM). This is an exclusively surface-sensitive imaging technology that utilizes charge-neutral, ultra-low-energy (approximately 64 meV) helium atom beams to probe the material.
Distinct Visual Contrast: Using an HF- and NH₄F-treated Si(111) surface as a model system, the SHeM imaging revealed a strong contrast between the hydrogen-passivated areas and the bare, unpassivated silicon.
Driven by Diffraction: The researchers confirmed that the bright contrast observed in the passivated regions is caused by surface diffraction from the hydrogen-stabilized lattice. The image contrast is governed by surface crystallinity, rather than simple topography or absorption.
Spotting Imperfections: SHeM imaging successfully revealed localized heterogeneities within the ostensibly uniform hydrogen layer. These spatial features correspond to surface defects like pinholes and microcracks.
Corroborated by Thermal Desorption: The imaging results were validated using temperature programmed desorption (TPD) spectroscopy. The TPD data tracked the sequential desorption of surface silicon trihydrides, dihydrides, and monohydrides at approximately 200°C, 400°C, and 530°C, directly linking the loss of SHeM contrast to hydride-specific desorption pathways.
This research establishes SHeM as a uniquely capable tool for light-element surface chemistry imaging. The ability to accurately and non-destructively map hydrogen coverage over technologically relevant, millimeter-scale areas creates exciting new opportunities for semiconductor process control, materials characterization, and the ongoing study of hydrogen-solid interactions.