The Virtual Scanning Tunneling Microscope: Induced Tunneling in Bilayer Two-Dimensional Electron Systems
ORAL
Abstract
We propose a novel probe technique, the virtual scanning tunneling microscope (VSTM), which will spatially and spectroscopically map two-dimensional electron systems (2DESs) in semiconductor heterostructures. The probe overcomes the typical inaccessibility of a buried 2DES by having a second parallel ``probe'' 2DES grown nearby. A biased tip overhead can then induce local tunneling from the probe 2DES into the original by adjusting the interlayer potential barrier. Prior bilayer studies have shown that a tunneling signal is dominated by the overlap of the layers' Fermi surfaces, hindering VSTM-induced tunneling and obscuring any spectroscopy. We show, however, in widely-space bilayers systems where interlayer inelastic scattering is more prominent that the previous energy-momentum constraints are relaxed. In GaAs/AlGaAs samples grown by two different sources, we show we can increase interlayer tunneling by an order of magnitude with gating, setting the stage for spectroscopy.
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Authors
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Adam Sciambi
Stanford University
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Matthew Pelliccione
Stanford University
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David Goldhaber-Gordon
Stanford University, Department of Physics, Stanford University, Dept. of Physics, Stanford University
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Seth Bank
University of California, Santa Barbara, University of Santa Barbara
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Arthur Gossard
University of California, Santa Barbara, University of Santa Barbara
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M.P. Lilly
Sandia National Laboratories, Sandia National Lab, Sandia National Laboratory
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John Reno
Sandia National Laboratories, Sandia National Lab, Sandia National Laboratory