For the colloidal nanophotonic structures, a transmission
electron
microscope (TEM) grid has been widely used as a substrate of dark-field
microscopy because a nanometer-scale feature can be effectively determined
by TEM imaging following dark-field microscopic studies. However,
an optically lossy carbon layer has been implemented in conventional
TEM grids. A broadband scattering from the edges of the TEM grid further
restricted an accessible signal-to-noise ratio. Herein, we demonstrate
that the freely suspended, ultrathin, and wide-scale transparent nanomembrane
can address such challenges. We developed a 1 mm by 600 μm scale
and 20 nm thick poly(vinyl formal) nanomembrane, whose area is around
180 times wider than a conventional TEM grid, so that the possible
broadband scattering at the edges of the grid was effectively excluded.
Also, such nanomembranes can be formed without the assistance of carbon
support; allowing us to achieve the highest signal-to-background ratio
of scattering among other substrates