The general approach dates back to the work in 1924 of
Louis de Broglie in his PhD thesis
Recherches sur la théorie des quanta where he introduced the concept of electrons as
matter waves. The wave nature was experimentally confirmed for electron beams in the work of two groups, the first the
Davisson–Germer experiment, the other by
George Paget Thomson and Alexander Reid. Alexander Reid, who was Thomson's graduate student, performed the first experiments, but he died soon after in a motorcycle accident. These experiments were rapidly followed by the first non-relativistic diffraction model for electrons by
Hans Bethe based upon the Schrödinger equation, which is very close to how electron diffraction is now described. Significantly,
Clinton Davisson and
Lester Germer noticed
gas electron diffraction developed by
Herman Mark and Raymond Weil, diffraction in liquids by Louis Maxwell, and the first electron microscopes developed by
Max Knoll and
Ernst Ruska. Despite early successes such as the determination of the positions of hydrogen atoms in NH4Cl crystals by W. E. Laschkarew and I. D. Usykin in 1933, boric acid by
John M. Cowley in 1953 and orthoboric acid by
William Houlder Zachariasen in 1954, electron diffraction for many years was a qualitative technique used to check samples within electron microscopes.
John M Cowley explains in a 1968 paper:
Thus was founded the belief, amounting in some cases almost to an article of faith, and persisting even to the present day, that it is impossible to interpret the intensities of electron diffraction patterns to gain structural information.This has slowly changed. One key step was the development in 1936 by
Walther Kossel and
Gottfried Möllenstedt of
convergent beam electron diffraction (CBED), This approach was extended by Peter Goodman and Gunter Lehmpfuhl, then mainly by the groups of
John Steeds and Michiyoshi Tanaka who showed how to use CBED patterns to determine
point groups and
space groups. This was combined with other
transmission electron microscopy approaches, typically where both local
microstructure and atomic structure was of importance. A second key set of work was that by the group of
Boris Vainshtein who demonstrated solving the structure of many different materials such as clays and micas using powder diffraction patterns, a success attributed to the samples being relatively thin. (Since the advent of
precession electron diffraction it has become clear that averaging over many different electron beam directions and thicknesses significantly reduces dynamical diffraction effects, so was probably also important.) More complete crystallographic analysis of intensity data was slow to develop. One of the key steps was the demonstration in 1976 by
Douglas L. Dorset and
Herbert A. Hauptman that conventional
direct methods for
x-ray crystallography could be used. Another was the demonstration in 1986 that a
Patterson function could be powerful in the seminal solution of the silicon (111) 7x7 reconstructed surface by Kunio Takanayagi using
ultra-high vacuum electron diffraction. More complete analyses were the demonstration that classical inversion methods could be used for surfaces in 1997 by Dorset and
Laurence D. Marks, and in 1998 the work by
Jon Gjønnes who combined three-dimensional electron diffraction with
precession electron diffraction and
direct methods to solve an intermetallic, also using dynamical refinements. At the same time as approaches to invert diffraction data using electrons were established, the resolution of electron microscopes became good enough that images could be combined with diffraction information. At first resolution was poor, with in 1956
James Menter publishing the first electron microscope images showing the lattice structure of a material at 1.2nm resolution. In 1968
Aaron Klug and David DeRosier used electron microscopy to visualise the structure of the tail of
bacteriophage T4, a common virus, a key step in the use of electrons for macromolecular structure determination. The first quantitative matching of atomic scale images and dynamical simulations was published in 1972 by J. G. Allpress, E. A. Hewat, A. F. Moodie and J. V. Sanders. In the early 1980s the resolution of electron microscopes was now sufficient to resolve the atomic structure of materials, for instance with the 600 kV instrument led by Vernon Cosslett, so combinations of
high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and diffraction became standard across many areas of science. Most of the research published using these approaches is described as electron microscopy, without the addition of the term electron crystallography. == Comparison with X-ray crystallography ==