Development of Low Cost Room Temperature STM for the Preliminary Analysis of 2D Materials and Twisted Graphene Bilayers

ORAL

Abstract

Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) is a valuable tool for studying atomic positions, electronic energy properties of materials, and distributions of electrons at the surface of a material. Using 3D printing, we developed a cost-effective room temperature STM for the analysis of 2D materials. After noise reduction and calibration, we can examine Moiré patterns in CVD-grown twisted bilayer graphene to efficiently identify the relative angle between the bilayers. This work demonstrates how modern tunneling microscopes can be used as a cost-effective preliminary diagnostic tool for studying atomic positions and electronic superlattices at material surfaces.

*Work supported by NSF EFRI 1433307, DOE-FG02-99ER45742, NSF DMR 1708158

Presenters

  • Param Patel

    • Physics, Rutgers University

Authors

  • Param Patel

    • Physics, Rutgers University
  • Michael Altvater

    • Rutgers University, New Brunswick
    • Physics, Rutgers University
  • Guohong Li

    • Rutgers University, New Brunswick
    • Physics, Rutgers University
  • Eva Andrei

    • Rutgers University, New Brunswick
    • Physics, Rutgers University