Cancelling Ambient Noise in Spectroscopic Images on a Scanning Tunneling Microscope

ORAL

Abstract

Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), a technique to measure the electronic structure of condensed matter systems with atomic resolution, requires an extremely stable environment to operate. Modern ultra-quiet STMs typically employ a combination of pneumatic suspensions and massive inertial blocks to reduce ambient vibrations to the sub-nanometer scale. Yet the tip-sample junction still experiences picometer vibrations that limit the signal-to-noise ratio in the tunneling current. Here we demonstrate a measurement scheme and software algorithm that reduces the effects of residual sub-picometer vibrations by order 50% in both topographic and spectroscopic images. We first calibrate a transfer function between a sensitive geophone on the STM head, and the STM tip-sample distance itself. We then use the simultaneously measured geophone output and tunneling current to cancel the effects of vibrations in the STM data in a 300Hz bandwidth.

*This work was supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation under grant number 4536.

Presenters

  • Albert Chien

    • Harvard University

Authors

  • Albert Chien

    • Harvard University
  • Bryce Primavera

    • Harvard University
  • Harris Pirie

    • Harvard University
    • Physics, Harvard University
    • Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States
    • Department of Physics, Harvard University
  • Jenny Hoffman

    • Harvard University