I(V) Spectroscopy Print E-mail
STM
In I(V) Spectroscopy (or Current Imaging Tunneling Spectroscopy, CITS) a normal topographic image is acquired at fixed Io and Vo. At each point in the image feedback loop is interrupted and the bias voltage is set to a series of voltages Vi and the tunneling current Ii is recorded. The voltage is then returned to Vo and the feedback loop is turned back on. Each I-V spectra can be acquired in a few milliseconds so there is no appreciable drift in the tip position. This procedure generates a complete current image Ii(x,y) at each voltage Vi in addition to the topographic image z(x,y)|VoIo.

CITS data can be used to calculate a current difference image DIVi,Vj(x,y) where Vi and Vj bracket a particular surface state, producing an atomic resolved, real space image of a surface state. This technique, for example can be used in UHV to image filled ad-atom states or the dangling bond states for silicon reconstructions.

References

  1. G. Binnig and H. Rohrer: Surf. Sci. 126 (1983) 236. Rep. Prog. Phys. 55, 1165-1240 (1992).

 

Copyright © 1998-2007, NT-MDT. All rights reserved.

 
< Prev

Those who believe in telekinetics, raise my hand

Kurt Vonnegut 

 

PraMa Strumentazione Scientifica

Partita IVA n. 00668970148

Joomla Templates by JoomlaShack Joomla Templates by Compass Design

Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional