Effects of Environment on Tunneling Spectroscopy of Gold Films

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EFFECTS OF ENVIRONMENT ON TUNNELING SPECTROSCOPY OF GOLD FILMS G.C. WETSEL*,t, Z.M. LIU*, T.L. WENG**, M.W. GOSNEY**, and R.J. WARMACK*** Department of Physics, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX 75275 **Department of Electrical Engineering, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX 75275 ***Health and Safety Research Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratorytt, Oak Ridge, TN 37831

ABSTRACT A scanning tunneling microscope with a tunneling-current dynamic range of four orders of magnitude has been used in tunneling-spectroscopy studies of Au surfaces in moderate vacuum and in various gases at atmospheric pressure.

Rapid scans of z-motion transducer voltage (Vz)

a function of tunneling current (I t) corrected plots of log(I t)

were measured as

under computer control.

versus Vz were essentially linear.

DriftThe mean

barrier potential was determined from the slope of these plots and the measured displacement-versus-Vzcalibration

curve.

Barrier potentials so

determined are compared for different environmental conditions of the Au surface.

I.

INTRODUCTION According to one-dimensional models of metal-insulator-metal junctions

[1],

the current through the juntion in the tunneling regime varies

exponentially with the thickness (s)

of the insulator;

logarithm of the tunneling current (It) line.

The slope of the log(It) versus s curve is

potential-barrier height (4); therefore, measurements of It

thus, a plot of the

as a function of s is

a straight

related to the mean

4 can be determined from

as a function of s (tunneling spectroscopy).

We report here experimental determination of 4 for Au surfaces under different environmental (STM)

conditions using a scanning-tunneling-microscope

for localized tunneling spectroscopy.

investigation is condition.

One of the objectives of this

to evaluate the technique as a determinant of surface

Quantitative knowledge of the presence of surface substances,

whether deposited intentionally for the purposes of microfabrication [2] or unintentionally (contamination)

[3],

is

Mat. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc. Vol. 139. 01989 Materials Research Society

of great interest.

304

II.

EXPERIMENT Our STM involves a segmented-tube tip scanner [4] rigidly mounted to

the scanner base plate,

a micrometer-driven vertical positioner for coarse

approach of sample to tip, and mechanical course horizontal positioning of the sample.

The large dynamic range of the z motion (perpendicular to the

surface) of the transducer (about 5 micrometers) electronics permit a fast, stable, manual, the tip.

and efficient feedback

coarse approach without crashing

An environmental sample chamber capable of moderate vacuum (the -6

order of 10

torr) can be evacuated with a turbomolecular pump or

backfilled with various gases.

The mechanical adjustment of the sample can

be effected from outside the sample chamber; after adjustment,

the scanner

assembly can be disconnected from the external adjusting mechanism. Vibration isolation of scanner assembly is suspension.

accomplished usi