Heterogeneous nanoparticle catalyst
development relies on an understanding
of their structure–property relationships, ideally at atomic
resolution and in three-dimensions. Current transmission electron
microscopy techniques such as discrete tomography can provide this
but require multiple images of each nanoparticle and are incompatible
with samples that change under electron irradiation or with surveying
large numbers of particles to gain significant statistics. Here, we
make use of recent advances in quantitative dark-field scanning transmission
electron microscopy to count the number atoms in each atomic column
of a single image from a platinum nanoparticle. These atom-counts,
along with the prior knowledge of the face-centered cubic geometry,
are used to create atomistic models. An energy minimization is then
used to relax the nanoparticle’s 3D structure. This rapid approach
enables high-throughput statistical studies or the analysis of dynamic
processes such as facet-restructuring or particle damage