Elemental Fingerprinting of Materials with Sensitivity at the Atomic Limit

ORAL

Abstract

Variants of scanning probe microscopes have proven tremendously valuable for extracting detailed information about the nature of a sample's surface (atomic, electronic, magnetic), however it has proven difficult to yield chemical information utilizing scanning probe techniques alone. At Argonne National Laboratory's Advanced Photon Source, a new in-situ high-resolution microscopy technique, the synchrotron x-ray scanning tunneling microscope (SXSTM), utilizes x-rays as a chemical, electronic and magnetic probe and the nanofabricated tips of a scanning tunneling microscope as the chemical detector to take full advantage of the sub-nm spatial resolutions that STMs provide. Utilizing the new SXSTM technique, chemical fingerprinting of individual nickel clusters on a Cu(111) surface has been demonstrated with a 2 nm lateral resolution and a sensitivity confined to the first atomic surface layer. In addition, the photoionization cross-section from a single nm-scale Ni cluster has been successfully measured. SXSTM could prove to be a powerful new surface characterization technique, enabling exciting areas of opportunity and discovery in the chemical and materials sciences.

Authors

  • Marvin Cummings

    Argonne Natl Lab

  • Nozomi Shirato

    Argonne Natl Lab

  • Heath Kersell

    Ohio U.

  • Yang Li

    Ohio U.

  • Benjamin Stripe

    Argonne Natl Lab

  • Daniel Rosenmann

    Argonne Natl Lab

  • Saw-Wai Hla

    Ohio U./Argonne Natl Lab

  • Volker Rose

    Argonne Natl Lab