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Atom manipulation and sub-molecular imaging using qPlus NC-AFM

Seminar Wednesday, 02/11/2011 14:00 - 15:30

Speakers: Adam Sweetman (School of Physics, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, UK)
Place: Library lecture room, building A - 1st floor, Cukrovarnicka 10, Institute of Physics ASCR, Prague 6
Presented in English
Organisers: Department of Thin Films and Nanostructures

We present recent work investigating the mechanical manipulation of the Si(100) surface, and the determination of molecular orientation at C -functionalized tips, 60 using a low temperature NC-AFM in the qPlus configuration. On Si(100) we show that small amplitude, zero bias NC-AFM allows for the atomically precise manipulation of the buckled dimers that form the c(4x2) surface reconstruction (Figure 1), but that the surface strain induced by defects and step edges plays a critical role in determining the energy barriers between states, and hence, the feasibility of manipulation. Following Giessibl et al.'s pioneering work on achieving “sub-atomic” contrast, we exploit the relatively large separation and narrow spatial extent of the adatom dangling bond orbitals at the Si(111)-(7x7) surface to image the apex of a C 60 functionalized tip, resulting in sub-molecular `inverse imaging' (Figure 2). We show that the orientation of the molecule on the apex can be determined in both NC-AFM and dynamic STM by comparison with computationally inexpensive ab inito simulations, resulting in a protocol for the creation of well defined tip apices for scanning probe experiments.

Figure 1: Manipulation of the buckled Si(100) surface by df(z) spectroscopy. A single spectroscopy point results in the correlated flip of 2 dimers – i.e. a `phason pair' is injected

Figure 2: `Inverse imaging' of a C60 functionalized 60 tip on the Si(111) surface. The `5 lobe' appearance of each ad-atom reveals a `pentagon down' orientation of the C60 on the tip apex.

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