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Electronique quantique dans les nano-structures explorées par microscopie à sonde locale / Quantum electronics in nanostructures explored by scanning probe microscopyDe Cecco, Alessandro 10 October 2018 (has links)
Les nano-structures sont des systèmes physiques de premier intérêt pour les études de base et pour les applications, car elles montrent des effets quantiques comme le confinement, la discrétisation énergétique, la cohérence... Le comportement quantique des nano-dispositifs peut être cependant fortement influencé par le désordre, les effets thermiques et hors-équilibre. Dans cette Thèse, nous montrons, par exemple, comment la dissipation affecte le transport électronique dans les dispositifs supraconducteurs soumis aux fréquences micro-ondes.En utilisant un setup cryogénique AFM/STM fait maison, on peut étudier différents types de nano-structures. En premier, nous nous occupons de la réalisation d'un transistor à électron unique avec une sonde locale. Les nano-particules métalliques sont bien connues pour leur comportement comme boîtes quantiques zéro-dimensionnelles (QD), elles montrent du confinement quantique et des effets de charge, que l’on retrouve aussi dans nos mesures de microscopie à sonde locale à basse température. Nous démontrons comment un nouveau procédé de nano-fabrication peut être mis en œuvre avec l'introduction d' une électrode de grille suffisamment mince et sans-fuite, ce qui pourra fournir un réglage de précision des propriétés de la boîte quantique et permettre l'exploration résolue spatialement des phénomènes quantiques dans différents régimes de couplage. En deuxième, nous étudions le graphène épitaxial sur SiC comme un matériau 2D très prometteur pour l'électronique. En particulier, les nano-rubans de graphène obtenus par croissance épitaxiale sur des parois inclinées (GNRs) sont des nano-structures d'intérêt fondamental qui peuvent fournir un accès direct et contrôlable au graphène neutre. À cause du confinement quantique, ces systèmes peuvent montrer du transport balistique exceptionnel à température ambiante. Nous réalisons une technique novatrice de potentiométrie à sonde locale qui nous permet une résolution spatiale à l'échelle du nm et une résolution en tension à l'échelle du µV. Le potentiel locale et la résistance locale mesurés sur un dispositif unique basé sur des nano-rubans de graphène nous donnent des indications claires de transport non-diffusif.La physique explorée, les méthodes ainsi que les technique développées dans cette Thèse peuvent donc fournir des nouvelles visions aux nombreux (et assez divers) sujets en vogue. / Nanostructures are physical systems of paramount interest for both fundamental studies and applications, since they display quantum effects such as confinement, energy discretization, coherence…The quantum behavior of nano-devices can however be strongly influenced by disorder, thermal and non-equilibrium effects. In this Thesis, we show, for instance, how dissipation deeply affects the electron transport in superconducting nano-devices at microwave frequencies.By using a home-made cryogenic AFM/STM setup, we are able to investigate different kinds of nanostructures. First, we address the realization of a Single Electron Transistor with a Scanning Probe. Metallic nanoparticles are well known for their behavior as 0D-Quantum Dots (QD), and they display quantum confinement and charging effects, which are evidenced in our low-temperature SPM measurements as well. We demonstrate how a novel nanofabrication process can be implemented with the addition of gate electrodes sufficiently thin and leakage-proof, which in the future can provide a fine-tuning of the QD's properties and allow spatially-resolved exploration of quantum phenomena in a variety of different coupling regimes. Second, we study epitaxial graphene on SiC as a very promising 2D material for electronics. In particular, epitaxial sidewalls graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) are nanostructures of fundamental interest which can provide direct and controllable access to charge neutral graphene. Due to quantum confinement, these systems can display exceptional ballistic transport at room temperature. We implemented an innovative Scanning Tunneling Potentiometry technique allowing for nm-scale spatial resolution and μ V-scale voltage resolution. Measured local potential and resistance of single GNRs devices provide clear indication of non-diffusive transport.The physics investigated and the methods and the techniques developed in this Thesis can thus provide a new insight on several (and quite diverse) on-trend topics.
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Propriétés structurelles et électroniques du graphène sur SiC(0001) étudiées par microscopie combinée STM/AFM / Structural and electronic properties of graphene on SiC(0001) studied by combined STM/AFM microscopyMorán Meza, José Antonio 16 October 2013 (has links)
Le graphène, un feuillet élémentaire de graphite, est un matériau très étudié par la communauté scientifique car ses propriétés physiques sont nouvelles et uniques. Il apparaît comme un matériau très prometteur pour des applications technologiques. Nous présentons une étude des propriétés structurelles et électroniques du graphène épitaxial sur 6H-SiC(0001) au moyen d’un microscope STM/AFM combiné basé sur un diapason en quartz avec une pointe conductrice en Pt/Ir ou en fibre de carbone. Les pointes fabriquées par attaque électrochimique présentent un rayon d’apex de quelques nanomètres et ont été caractérisées par SEM, TEM et émission électronique par effet de champ. On s’est d’abord focalisé sur les propriétés d’un échantillon qui présente des terrasses partiellement recouvertes de graphène. Dans ce cas, l’image STM ne donne pas la topographie de la surface. Celle-ci est donnée par l’AFM en mode répulsif. Les différentes propriétés électroniques de chaque terrasse sont confirmées par des mesures spectroscopiques I=f(V). Puis, l’étude à haute résolution par FM-AFM sur une terrasse lisse a révélé la structure ondulée et périodique de la reconstruction 6√3x6√3R30° du SiC(0001) recouverte de graphène. Nous montrons que les maxima des nappes d’iso-densité locale d’états électroniques au niveau de Fermi observés dans l’image STM ne se superposent pas avec les zones associées aux maxima des nappes d’iso-densité d’états totaux (Topographie AFM). Ils apparaissent décalés de ~1 nm le long de la direction [11] de la quasi-maille 6x6 de la reconstruction 6√3x6√3R30°. Comme l’amplitude mesurée des ondulations de la surface augmente avec le gradient de force appliqué, on montre que la surface du graphène est déformée par la pointe AFM. Cette déformation qui modifie le couplage électronique entre le graphène et la couche tampon influence fortement le contraste des images STM/AFM. Les conséquences de cette déformation sur les images STM résolvant le réseau du graphène sont aussi discutées. / The graphene, a basic sheet of graphite, is a new material intensively studied by the scientific community because of its new and unique physical properties. Furthermore it appears as a very promising material for technological applications. We present a study of structural and electronic properties of epitaxial graphene on 6H-SiC(0001) using a combined STM/AFM microscope based on a quartz tuning fork with a conductive tip. The tips made from electrochemical etched Pt/Ir wire or carbon fiber have an apex radius of few nanometers and were characterized by SEM, TEM and by field electron emission. First, we focused on the properties of a sample showing terraces partially covered with graphene. In this case, the STM images do not provide the real surface topography, which is given by the AFM topography working in repulsive mode. The electronic properties of each terrace are confirmed by local spectroscopic I=f(V) measurements. Then, the high-resolution FM-AFM study on a smooth terrace revealed the corrugated structure due to the periodic 6√3x6√3R30° reconstruction of SiC (0001) covered with graphene. We show that the maxima of the local density of electronic states at the Fermi level observed in STM image do not overlap with the zones associated with maxima of total states density (AFM Topography). They appear shifted by ~1 nm along the direction [11] of the 6x6 nanomesh of the 6√3x6√3R30° reconstruction. As the corrugation amplitude of the surface increases with the applied force gradient, we show that the surface of graphene is distorted by the AFM tip. This deformation modifies the electronic coupling between the graphene and the buffer layer and strongly influences the contrast in STM/AFM images. The consequences of this deformation are also discussed in the STM images showing the lattice of graphene.
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Crystallographic Image Processing with Unambiguous 2D Bravais Lattice Identification on the Basis of a Geometric Akaike Information CriterionBilyeu, Taylor Thomas 02 July 2013 (has links)
Crystallographic image processing (CIP) is a technique first used to aid in the structure determination of periodic organic complexes imaged with a high-resolution transmission electron microscope (TEM). The technique has subsequently been utilized for TEM images of inorganic crystals, scanning TEM images, and even scanning probe microscope (SPM) images of two-dimensional periodic arrays. We have written software specialized for use on such SPM images. A key step in the CIP process requires that an experimental image be classified as one of only 17 possible mathematical plane symmetry groups. The current methods used for making this symmetry determination are not entirely objective, and there is no generally accepted method for measuring or quantifying deviations from ideal symmetry. Here, we discuss the crystallographic symmetries present in real images and the general techniques of CIP, with emphasis on the current methods for symmetry determination in an experimental 2D periodic image. The geometric Akaike information criterion (AIC) is introduced as a viable statistical criterion for both quantifying deviations from ideal symmetry and determining which 2D Bravais lattice best fits the experimental data from an image being processed with CIP. By objectively determining the statistically favored 2D Bravais lattice, the determination of plane symmetry in the CIP procedure can be greatly improved. As examples, we examine scanning tunneling microscope images of 2D molecular arrays of the following compounds: cobalt phthalocyanine on Au (111) substrate; nominal cobalt phthalocyanine on Ag (111); tetraphenoxyphthalocyanine on highly oriented pyrolitic graphite; hexaazatriphenylene-hexacarbonitrile on Ag (111). We show that the geometric AIC procedure can unambiguously determine which 2D Bravais lattice fits the experimental data for a variety of different lattice types. In some cases, the geometric AIC procedure can be used to determine which plane symmetry group best fits the experimental data, when traditional CIP methods fail to do so.
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Nanometer scale connections to semiconductor surfacesZikovsky, Janik 11 1900 (has links)
Extending electronic devices beyond the limitations of current micro-electronics manufacturing will require detailed knowledge of how to make contacts to semiconductor surfaces. In this work, we investigated several methods by which such connections to silicon surfaces could be achieved. Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) was our main experimental tool, allowing direct imaging of the surfaces at the atomic level.
First, the growth of self-forming linear nanostructures of organic molecules on silicon surfaces offers a possibility of creating devices with hybrid organic-silicon functionality. We have studied the growth of many different molecules on a variety of hydrogen-terminated silicon surfaces: H-Si(100)-2x1, H-Si(100)-3x1, and H-Si(111)-1x1. We found molecular growth patterns affected by steric crowding, by sample doping level, or by exposure to ion-pump created radicals. We formed the first contiguous "L-shaped" molecular lines, and used an external electric field to direct molecular growth. We attempted to study a novel method for nanoscale information transfer along molecular lines based on excitation energy transfer.
The second part of the work focuses on the development and use of a new multiple-probe STM instrument. The design and the custom STM control software written for it are described. Connections to Si surfaces were achieved with a combination of lithographically defined metal contacts and STM tips. Two-dimensional surface conductivity of the Si(111)-7x7 surface was measured, and the effect of modifying the surface with organic molecules was investigated. A novel method, scanning tunneling fractional current imaging (STFCI), was developed to further study surface conductance. This method allowed us to determine, for the first time, that the resistance of steps on the Si(111)-7x7 surface is significantly higher than that of the surface alone.
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Design, Synthesis, and Monitoring of Light-Activated Motorized NanomachinesChiang, Pinn-Tsong 16 September 2013 (has links)
Our group has developed a family of single molecules termed nanocars, which are aimed at performing controllable motion on surfaces. In this work, a series of light-activated motorized nanomachines incorporated with a MHz frequency light-activated unidirectional rotary motor were designed and synthesized. We hope the light-activated motor can serve as the powering unit for the nanomachines, and perform controllable translational motion on surfaces or in solution.
A series of motorized nanovehicles intended for scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) imaging were designed and synthesized. A p-carborane-wheeled motorized nanocar was synthesized and monitored by STM. Single-molecule imaging was accomplished on a Cu(111) surface. However, further manipulations did lead to motor induced lateral motion. We attributed this result to the strong molecule-surface interactions between the p-carborane-wheeled nanocar and the Cu(111) surface. To fine-tune the molecule-surface interactions, an adamantane-wheeled motorized nanocar and a three-wheel nanoroadster were designed and synthesized. In addition, the STM substrates will be varied and different combinations of molecule-surface interactions will be studied.
As a complimentary imaging method to STM, single-molecule fluorescence microscopy (SMFM) also provides single-molecule level resolution. Unlike STM experiment requires ultra-high vacuum and conductive substrate, SMFM experiment is conducted at ambient conditions and uses non-conductive substrate. This imaging method allows us to study another category of molecule-surface interactions. We plan to design a fluorescent motorized nanocar that is suitable for SMFM studies. However, both the motor and fluorophore are photochemically active molecules. In proximity, some undesired energy transfer or interference could occur. A cyanine 5- (cy5-) tagged motorized nanocar incorporated with the MHz motor was designed and synthesized in order to minimize the potential energy transfer or interference between the motor and the fluorophore. The SMFM study of this cy5-tagged motorized nanocar is currently undergoing.
The design of light-activated motorized nanocar inspired the design of nanosubmarines. We used fluorescence quenching and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) to study the diffusion of single molecules. The fluorescence quenching experiments of Ru(bpy)3+2 by a quenching nanosubmarine was conducted, but no motor induced acceleration of the molecule were observed. Another fluorescent nanosubmarine was monitored by FCS, and no increase of diffusion coefficient was found. Finally, a 1-D channel approach was adopted for decreasing the effects of Brownian motion, and acceleration of nanosubmarine was observed.
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STM/STS and BEES Study of NanocrystalsShao, Jianfei 11 April 2006 (has links)
This work investigates the electronic properties of very small gold and semiconductor particles using Scanning Tunneling Microscopy/Spectroscopy (STM/STS) and Ballistic Electron Emission Spectroscopy (BEES). Complementary theoretical works were also performed. The first theoretical work was to calculate the quantized states in the CdS/HgS/CdS quantum-well-quantum-dot nanocrystals. An eight-band envelope function method was applied to this system. This method treats exactly the coupling between the conduction bands, the light-hole bands, the heavy-hole bands, and the spin-orbit split bands. The contributions of all other bands were taken into account using second order perturbation theory.
Gold nanocrystals with diameters of 1.5 nm have discrete energy levels with energy spacings of about 0.2 eV. These values are comparable to the single electron charging energy, which was about 0.5 eV in our experimental configuration. Since bulk gold doesnt have an energy gap, we expect the electron levels both below and above the Fermi level should be involved in the tunneling. Measured spectroscopy data have rich features. In order to understand and relate these features to the electronic properties of the nanocrystals, we developed a tunneling model. This model includes the effect of excited states that have electron-hole pairs. The relaxation between discrete electron energy levels can also be included in this model. We also considered how the nanocrystals affect the BEES current.
In this work an ultra-high vacuum and low-temperature STM was re-designed and rebuilt. The BEEM/BEES capabilities were incorporated into the STM. We used this STM to image gold nanocrystals and semiconductor nanocrystals. STS and BEES spectra of gold nanocrystals were collected and compared with calculations.
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Elastic and inelastic scattering effects in conductance measurements at the nanoscale : A theoretical treatiseBerggren, Peter January 2015 (has links)
Elastic and inelastic interactions are studied in tunnel junctions of a superconducting nanoelectromechanical setup and in response to resent experimental superconducting scanning tunneling microscope findings on a paramagnetic molecule. In addition, the electron density of molecular graphene is modeled by a scattering theory approach in very good agreement with experiment. All studies where conducted through the use of model Hamiltonians and a Green function formalism. The nanoelectromechanical system comprise two fixed superconducting leads in-between which a cantilever suspended superconducting island oscillates in an asymmetric fashion with respect to both fixed leads. The Josephson current is found to modulate the island motion which in turn affects the current, such that parameter regions of periodic, quasi periodic and chaotic behavior arise. Our modeled STM setup reproduces the experimentally obtained spin excitations of the paramagnetic molecule and we show a probable cause for the increased uniaxial anisotropy observed when closing the gap distance of tip and substrate. A wider parameter space is also investigated including effects of external magnetic fields, temperature and transverse anisotropy. Molecular graphene turns out to be well described by our adopted scattering theory, producing results that are in good agreement with experiment. Several point like scattering centers are therefore well suited to describe a continuously decaying potential and effects of impurities are easily calculated.
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Buckling Type, Domain Boundaries and Donor Atoms: Atomic Scale Characterization of the Si(111)-2x1 SurfaceLöser, Karolin 31 January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Nanometer scale connections to semiconductor surfacesZikovsky, Janik Unknown Date
No description available.
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Titanium dioxide surfaces and interfaces studied using ESDIAD, LEED and STMCocks, Ian David January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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