We have constructed a scanning tunneling potentiometry system capable of simultaneously mapping the transport-related electrochemical potential of a biased sample along with its surface topography. Combining a novel sample biasing technique with a continuous current-nulling feedback scheme pushes the noise performance of the measurement to its fundamental limit - the Johnson noise of the STM tunnel junction. The resulting 130 nV voltage sensitivity allows us to spatially resolve local potentials at scales down to 2 nm, while maintaining angstrom scale STM imaging, all at scan sizes of up to 15 um. A mm-range two-dimensional coarse positioning stage and the ability to operate from liquid helium to room temperature with a fast turn-around time greatly expand the versatility of the instrument. By performing studies of several model systems, we discuss the implications of various types of surface morphology for potentiometric measurements.
@article{arxiv.0804.2735,
title = {Design and Performance of a Practical Variable-Temperature Scanning Tunneling Potentiometry System},
author = {M. Rozler and M. R. Beasley},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0804.2735},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
16 pages, 17 figures, accepted to Review of Scientific Instruments v2 - minor changes: cleaned up figures/figure captions