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.

*This work was funded by the Office of Science Early Career Research Program through the Division of Scientific User Facilities, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, U.S. Department of Energy, through Grant SC70705.

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