1 / 15

Methods and T ehni ques in Surface Science

Methods and T ehni ques in Surface Science. Prof. Dumitru LUCA “Alexandru Ion Cuza” University, Iasi, Romania. Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM). Allows for surface mapping by evidencing atomic-scale surface features Characterization of surface topology.

airell
Download Presentation

Methods and T ehni ques in Surface Science

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Methods andTehniquesin Surface Science Prof. Dumitru LUCA “Alexandru Ion Cuza” University, Iasi, Romania

  2. Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM) • Allows for surface mapping by evidencing atomic-scale surface features • Characterization of surface topology. • Evidencing surface growth and interatomic bridging sites. Resolution: lateral < 1.0 Å vertical < 0.1Å Z X Remark: What is evidenced is the electron density at surface, not atom positions! Images are frequently interpreted as “atoms”, but this is not necessarily true under any circumstance.

  3. The tunneling effect Useful reference: http://www.ntmdt.ru/Documents/153_STM%20Phys_Back.pdf

  4. STM schematics Dedicated only to investigate conductive surfaces… . . The Inventors of the STM, Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer have been awarded Nobel prize in physics in 1986

  5. STM Tip Sample EV EV 1 2 EF EF Bulk Potential Barrier Potential Barrier Bulk STM Tip Sample EV EV d EF EF Bulk Bulk Potential Barrier Potential Barrier STM basics Useful reference: http://www.ntmdt.ru/Documents/153_STM%20Phys_Back.pdf Electrons flow in both directions with equal probability!

  6. STM tip Sample EV EV d EF EF Bulk Bulk Potential barrier Potential barrier The physical background of STM By applying a biasing voltage V: j –current density; a1,a2 – constants; V– bias voltage; s – tip-to-sample distance av – the average value of tip and surface work function; http://www.ntmdt.ru/Documents/169_1.3%20Obser_Phys_Quantities_in_STM.pdf

  7. STM operation Two modes: constant current and constant inaltime height The most frequently mode is the constant curent. • A constant value of approx. Itunnel = (0.1 - 1 nA) is currently used. • To keep Itunnel = constant, z should be automatically adjusted by a feedback circuit. Useful reference: http://www.ntmdt.ru/SPM-Techniques/Principles/

  8. . Constant current mode Tunneling currents up to 0.03 nA are recorded, which are small enough to investigate even low-conductivity surfaces, including biological samples.

  9. Constant height mode Here, a certain value is set for z, and Itunnel is directly measured. No feedback! • A periodic variation of the tip-to-sample distance occurs. • There, where tip will be positioned exactly on top of a sample atom, the tunneling current will be maxim • When the tip is above a valley, the tunneling current will be much smaller. Utilized only for very flat surfaces!

  10. Constant Height Mode • STM Drawbacks: • Complexity in data processing, for certain surfaces: • The surface image is not straightforwardly determined by its topography, but also by: • density of states, • the sign and value of the bias, • current value etc.

  11. What information can we get from STM imagining 1. Atom seggregation at surface… …including seggregtion of impurities at grain boundaries. This image depicts the (110) surface of the Fe-3.5at%Si alloy. Aproximately 1/3 of surface atoms are Si (dark color in the picture) which substitute the Fe atoms! Carbon atoms cannot be detected, but they mask the Fe atoms in the central rows of the ladder-type structure. Images taken from the paper by Biedermann, M. Schmid , P. Varga, Surf. Sci. 331-333 (1995) 787-793.

  12. What information can we get from STM images? 2. Surface growth processes • Pb and Cu are non-miscibile metals: • rPb= 1.37 rCu. • Es Pb = 0.50 J/m2, while Es Cu (1.96 J/m2). • According to the classical theory of growth phenomena, Cu should grow as small islands on Pb surface. • 2. Pb atomii are very mobile. • A Cu island grown on Pb has, in its turn, a surface at its lateral edges, therefore its surface energy increases. • The most favorable configuration (minimal energy) occurs when these side wings are covered with Pb. A compromise between the seggregation tendency of Cu and the large mobility of Pb atoms.

  13. Other STM applications • Nanolithography • The most direct way for surface manufacturing. • The specimen’s surface under the STM tip can be melted and evaporated. An example of STM lithography: an STM image of 3 ML of a film during 3 electric pulses exposure.

  14. Nano-anodization • A voltage is applied between the conductive cantilever tip and the metal surface to be anodized. Electrochemical processes occur that lead to the formation of oxide nanostructures. • By using the electro-lithography, the local geometric and composition properties of the sample surface can be altered. .

  15. Nano-manipulation Fe on Cu (111)

More Related