A scanning tunneling microscopy based potentiometry technique and its application to the local sensing of the spin Hall effect

Similar documents
Conductance switching in Ag 2 S devices fabricated by sulphurization

A Project Report Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Minnesota By

- Near Field Scanning Optical Microscopy - Electrostatic Force Microscopy - Magnetic Force Microscopy

Investigate in magnetic micro and nano structures by Magnetic Force Microscopy (MFM)

attosnom I: Topography and Force Images NANOSCOPY APPLICATION NOTE M06 RELATED PRODUCTS G

Measurement of Microscopic Three-dimensional Profiles with High Accuracy and Simple Operation

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Nanovie. Scanning Tunnelling Microscope

Study of shear force as a distance regulation mechanism for scanning near-field optical microscopy

Investigation of the Near-field Distribution at Novel Nanometric Aperture Laser

Lecture 20: Optical Tools for MEMS Imaging

Fabrication of a submicron patterned using an electrospun single fiber as mask. Author(s)Ishii, Yuya; Sakai, Heisuke; Murata,

Long-distance propagation of short-wavelength spin waves. Liu et al.

Self-navigation of STM tip toward a micron sized sample

Supplementary Materials for

RHK Technology. Application Note: Kelvin Probe Force Microscopy with the RHK R9. ω mod allows to fully nullify any contact potential difference

INDIAN INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY BOMBAY

Multi-Probe Atomic Force Microscopy Using Piezo-Resistive Cantilevers and Interaction between Probes

Figure for the aim4np Report

Tip-induced band bending and its effect on local barrier height measurement studied by light-modulated scanning tunneling spectroscopy

State of the Art Room Temperature Scanning Hall Probe Microscopy using High Performance micro-hall Probes

Akiyama-Probe (A-Probe) guide

S1. Current-induced switching in the magnetic tunnel junction.

Measurement and noise performance of nano-superconducting-quantuminterference devices fabricated by focused ion beam

CONSTRUCTING A SCANNING TUNNELING MICROSCOPE FOR THE STUDY OF SUPERCONDUCTIVITY

A single-photon detector with high efficiency. and sub-10 ps time resolution

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Analysis of the process of anodization with AFM

Electrical transport properties in self-assembled erbium. disilicide nanowires

Gigahertz Ambipolar Frequency Multiplier Based on Cvd Graphene

Electric polarization properties of single bacteria measured with electrostatic force microscopy

Nano-structured superconducting single-photon detector

Atomic-layer deposition of ultrathin gate dielectrics and Si new functional devices

Radio-frequency scanning tunneling microscopy

Design, Fabrication and Characterization of Very Small Aperture Lasers

Supplementary Information

Akiyama-Probe (A-Probe) guide

Unit-25 Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM)

Distinguishing Between Mechanical and Electrostatic. Interaction in Single-Pass Multifrequency Electrostatic Force

BRIDGE VOLTAGE SOURCE

Microscopic Basis for the Mechanism of Carrier Dynamics in an Operating p-n Junction Examined by using Light-Modulated Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy

Supporting information: Visualizing the motion of. graphene nanodrums

discovery in 1993 [1]. These molecules are interesting due to their superparamagneticlike

Near-field imaging of resonating hyperbolic polaritons in nanorod antennas made of boron nitride

A Brief Introduction to Single Electron Transistors. December 18, 2011

Supplementary Figures

Waveguiding in PMMA photonic crystals

A New Profile Measurement Method for Thin Film Surface

Body-Biased Complementary Logic Implemented Using AlN Piezoelectric MEMS Switches

Profile Measurement of Resist Surface Using Multi-Array-Probe System

Physics Faculty Publications and Presentations

Novel Josephson Junction Geometries in NbCu bilayers fabricated by Focused Ion Beam Microscope

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Supporting Information. Atomic-scale Spectroscopy of Gated Monolayer MoS 2

Supplementary Figure 1 High-resolution transmission electron micrograph of the

Fabrication and Device Simulation of Single Nano-Scale Organic Static Induction Transistors

Nanonics Systems are the Only SPMs that Allow for On-line Integration with Standard MicroRaman Geometries

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

LOW TEMPERATURE STM/AFM

Supporting Information. Vertical Graphene-Base Hot-Electron Transistor

MEMS for RF, Micro Optics and Scanning Probe Nanotechnology Applications

Supplementary Figure 1 Schematic illustration of fabrication procedure of MoS2/h- BN/graphene heterostructures. a, c d Supplementary Figure 2

Defense Technical Information Center Compilation Part Notice

4H-SiC V-Groove Trench MOSFETs with the Buried p + Regions

Supplementary information for Stretchable photonic crystal cavity with

Controller Design for Z Axis Movement of STM Using SPM Control Software

Supplementary Information. implantation of bottom electrodes

Lateral Force: F L = k L * x

Author(s) Issue Date Text Version author. DOI / /18/9/095501

A large-area wireless power transmission sheet using printed organic. transistors and plastic MEMS switches

Scanning Tunneling Microscope Nanolithography on SrRuO3 Thin

[emu/cm 3 ] M s. of a 190-nm wide Pt(5 nm)/py(5 nm) nanowire measured as a function of magnetic field

Keysight Technologies Scanning Microwave Microscopy Solutions for Quantitative Semiconductor Device Characterization.

Supporting Information

Basic methods in imaging of micro and nano structures with atomic force microscopy (AFM)

Analog Synaptic Behavior of a Silicon Nitride Memristor

Midinfrared absorption measured at a λ/400 resolution with an atomic force microscope

Mapping piezoelectric response in nanomaterials using a dedicated non-destructive scanning probe technique. Supporting Information

Supporting Information

Standard Operating Procedure of Atomic Force Microscope (Anasys afm+)

Photomixer as a self-oscillating mixer

Resistive Switching Mechanisms on TaO x and SrRuO 3 Thin Film Surfaces Probed by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy

ATOMIC FORCE MICROSCOPY

Optical Monitoring System Enables Greater Accuracy in Thin-Film Coatings. Line Scan Cameras What Do They Do?

A process for, and optical performance of, a low cost Wire Grid Polarizer

Electrical Properties of Chicken Herpes Virus Based on Impedance Analysis using Atomic Force Microscopy

Research of photolithography technology based on surface plasmon

Fine structure of the inner electric field in semiconductor laser diodes studied by EFM.

Atomristor: Non-Volatile Resistance Switching in Atomic Sheets of

Characterization of Silicon-based Ultrasonic Nozzles

Nanolithography using high transmission nanoscale ridge aperture probe

Nanoscale Material Characterization with Differential Interferometric Atomic Force Microscopy

photolithographic techniques (1). Molybdenum electrodes (50 nm thick) are deposited by

plasmonic nanoblock pair

Reliability of deep submicron MOSFETs

Strong-Field-Enhanced Spectroscopy in Silicon. Nanoparticle Electric and Magnetic Dipole. Resonance near a Metal Surface

Constant Frequency / Lock-In (AM-AFM) Constant Excitation (FM-AFM) Constant Amplitude (FM-AFM)

Esaki diodes in van der Waals heterojunctions with broken-gap energy band alignment

IMAGING P-N JUNCTIONS BY SCANNING NEAR-FIELD OPTICAL, ATOMIC FORCE AND ELECTRICAL CONTRAST MICROSCOPY. G. Tallarida Laboratorio MDM-INFM

Spin-orbit torque-driven magnetization switching and thermal effects studied in Ta\CoFeB\MgO nanowires

Transcription:

A scanning tunneling microscopy based potentiometry technique and its application to the local sensing of the spin Hall effect Ting Xie 1, a), Michael Dreyer 2, David Bowen 3, Dan Hinkel 3, R. E. Butera 3, Charles Krafft 3, and Isaak Mayergoyz 1 1 Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA 2 Department of Physics, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, USA 3 Laboratory for Physical Sciences, College Park, Maryland, 20740, USA Abstract A scanning tunneling microscopy based potentiometry technique for the measurements of the local surface electric potential is presented and illustrated by experiments performed on current-carrying thin tungsten films. The obtained results demonstrate a sub-millivolt resolution in the measured surface potential. The application of this potentiometry technique to the local sensing of the spin Hall effect is outlined and some experimental results are reported. Recent technological progress has resulted in the reduction of the dimensions of electronic and magnetic devices to the nanoscale. One of the many challenges associated with this nanoscale reduction is to develop reliable techniques for the measurement of local electrical properties of materials. To handle this problem, various techniques have been proposed to measure the local surface potential at the nanoscale and used in studies of graphene and other materials. 1-4 In this letter, we describe a non-contact surface potential measurement (potentiometry) technique by employing the scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) function of a scanning tunneling microscope (STM). Since the STS is usually an embedded function in common STM systems, this potentiometry technique hence requires no further modification of an STM system. This makes the technique readily accessible for virtually all STMs. It is demonstrated below that this potentiometry technique has a sub-millivolt resolution of surface potential measurements and nanometer resolution in positioning. As a result, the resistivity of conducting films (and its uniformity) can be fully characterized at the nanoscale. Furthermore, this potentiometry technique is applied to the STM based study of the spin Hall effect (SHE) in tungsten films and some experimental results of this study are reported. To illustrate the potentiometry technique by using an STM,5 nm-thick tungsten films on sapphire substrates have been fabricated by using DC magnetron sputtering and analyzed a) Email: tingxie@terpmail.umd.edu

in-situ under ultra-high vacuum conditions. A schematic diagram for the potentiometry analysis is presented in Fig. 1. This figure shows that one of the terminals of the sample is connected to the voltage source while the other terminal is connected to a current source to control a tunneling gap voltage (Vg) and supply a desired bias current (Ibias) through the tungsten film, respectively. The flow of the bias current results in a voltage drop along the tungsten film. To detect the potential at any (x, y)-location on the sample, we have implemented the following measurement procedure based on STS. The measurement starts by parking the STM tip at the desired (x, y)-location. Then, the feedback loop of the STM system is turned off to freeze the sample and tip at their desired positions, i.e. to eliminate any possible mechanical movements. Next, the tunneling current It is measured at different values of the source voltage Vs. After the measurement of It-Vs curve is performed, the feedback loop is switched on and the tip can be moved to other locations for further measurements of the potential. In our experiments, the terminal of the sample connected to the voltage source is used as the reference point for the surface potential. The bias-current-induced surface potential is determined from the obtained It-Vs curves by applying Kirchhoff s voltage law (KVL) to the loop indicated by the blue dash line in Fig. 1. Since the STM tip is virtually grounded by the pre-amplifier, the KVL equation for the above loop can be written as follows Vs +V(x, y) = Vg + ItRtip, (1) where Vs is the source voltage, V(x, y) is the voltage between the tunneling location and the reference point, Vg is the tunneling gap voltage, It is the tunneling current, and Rtip is the tip resistance. It is apparent that a tunneling current of zero corresponds to zero tunneling gap voltage. Therefore, the right-hand side of equation (1) is equal to zero when It = 0. In this case, the surface potential V(x, y) = -Vs, where the value of Vs at which It = 0 can be found by locating the intersection of the It-Vs curve with the It =0 line. Typical It-Vs curves obtained at Ibias = 0 ma, 0.2 ma and -0.1 ma are shown in Fig. 2a. By identifying the intersections of these curves with the It = 0 line, the surface potentials due to the above bias currents are found to be 0 mv, 52 mv, and 26 mv, respectively. The surface potential at any fixed location is a linear function of Ibias. Hence, by applying linear regression to the data shown in the inset, we found that the resistance is about 260.7 Ω between the tunneling location and the reference point. Surface potentials measured at different (x, y)-locations on the tungsten thin film at a constant bias current reveal the resistivity of the tungsten film. The results of these measurements are illustrated in Fig. 2b. The potential gradient in the x-direction is found to be 1.20 mv/μm at Ibias = 10 ma. In fact, the good linear fit of the surface potentials measured at various locations indicates a good uniformity in the thickness of the deposited film. Since the x- direction is parallel to the direction of the current flow, the resistivity of the film can then be estimated to be 240 μω cm for the tungsten film with a cross-section of 5 nm 4 mm. This high resistivity is a fingerprint of a β-phase tungsten film and it is consistent with results reported in the literature. 5,6 As expected, the potentiometry measurements along

the y-axis at (x, y) = (0 µm, 0 µm), (0 µm, -0.6 µm), and (0 µm, 0.6 µm) show no potential differences because the y-direction is perpendicular to the current flow direction. To illustrate the lateral resolution of the described potentiometry technique, measurements have been performed at the location of a gold nanoparticle deposited on the tungsten film through a shadow mask, as shown in Fig. 3. The STM image of the nanoparticle (Fig. 3a) shows a layer-by-layer structure of the deposited gold. The surface potential distribution in Fig. 3b was obtained for 10 ma bias current flow in the x- direction. This measurement demonstrates the nanometer scale lateral resolution of the described potentiometry technique. Indeed, the image shows a clear distortion in the distribution of the surface potential on the tungsten film due to the gold particle. This distortion is evident from the abrupt drop in surface potential in the vicinity of the current-encountering part of the particle boundary (right-hand side). Meanwhile, the potential difference between the gold area and the tungsten film on the left-hand side of the gold particle is so small that a clear boundary cannot be identified. The features of the potential map of the gold nanoparticle are consistent with its high conductivity. Next, we demonstrate that the described potentiometry technique is instrumental for an STM based study of the spin Hall effect (SHE) in conducting films, which is currently of great interest in spintronics research. The SHE manifests itself in the accumulation of the spin-polarized electrons on the surface of a current-carrying sample. 5-8 In the STM study of the SHE, it is very important to maintain a constant tunneling gap voltage between the tip and the conducting film in the presence of current flow through the film, which can be achieved by using the potentiometry technique. Indeed, by neglecting the very small term ItipRtip (~ nv) in equation (1), we find that a desired tunneling voltage Vg can be accomplished by setting the source voltage Vs = Vg-V(x, y). With this technique, we have performed an STM study of the SHE by using tungsten films and tungsten tips. In the study, the tunneling current has been measured in the presence of a current pulse (~ 1 ms) at a constant tunneling voltage of 0.5 V with the STM feedback turned off to freeze the position of the tip and sample. In our experiments, we observed the following two distinct phenomena. First, there is a substantial and gradual in time increase in the tunneling current, as shown in Fig. 4a. This can be attributed to a change in the tip-sample distance (tunneling gap) in the presence of the bias current through the tungsten film. These gradual tunneling gap changes have been confirmed by using atomic force microscopy (AFM) (see inset of Fig. 4a, where the results of AFM measurements are presented). There, the shift of the cantilever resonant frequency (df) is caused by the decrease in the tunneling gap during the Ibias pulse. These tunneling gap changes are most likely caused by local thermal expansion. Second, we have also observed an asymmetry in the tunneling currents caused by switching the polarity of the tunneling gap voltage in the presence of bias current pulses, as shown in Fig. 4b. This figure shows the difference in the tunneling currents measured independently at -0.5 V and 0.5 V with identical bias current flows through the film. The difference with no bias current (0 ma) is almost zero while the differences increase in time in the presence of 5 ma and 7 ma bias currents. This temporal increase in the difference is due to the increase in the tunneling current

caused by the bias current as discussed for Fig 4a. Therefore, the temporal increase can be eliminated by normalizing the difference in the tunneling currents measured at -0.5 V and 0.5 V to their mean values. The normalized results are shown in the inset of Fig. 4b, which clearly indicate a bias-current-induced asymmetry in the tunneling currents measured at different polarities of the tunneling voltages. This asymmetry can be explained by the asymmetry in the tunneling process caused by the SHE. Indeed, on the one hand, when the polarity of the tunneling gap voltage is such that electrons tunnel from the tungsten film, we deal with the tunneling of electrons which are spin-polarized due to the SHE. On the other hand, when the polarity of the tunneling voltage is such that electrons tunnel from the tip to the film, we deal with the tunneling of non-spin-polarized electrons. The fact that this asymmetry is enhanced by the increase in the bias current through the film (see the inset of Fig. 4b) also supports that this mentioned asymmetry is related to the SHE. The described experimental results suggest that the local STM sensing of the SHE in conducting films can be achieved with the potentiometry technique. In summary, we have described and experimentally illustrated a potentiometry technique for the measurement of the surface potential in a conducting film with a common STM system. The unique feature of this technique is the use of the built-in STS function to detect the bias-current-induced surface potential. In this way, an STM system can be easily configured to characterize the resistivity of a sample and its thickness uniformity at the nanoscale. It is also demonstrated that this potentiometry technique is instrumental for the local STM study of the SHE. It is also apparent that the presented potentiometry technique opens the opportunity for the study of transport phenomena at the nanoscale in conducting and semiconductor films.

Figure 1. Schematic diagram of the potentiometry analysis with an STM. The blue dash line indicates the loop to which Kirchhoff s voltage law was applied.

Figure 2. (a) It-Vs curves obtained at one location on the tungsten film with Ibias = 0 ma, 0.2 ma and -0.1 ma. Inset: The surface potential obtained with different bias currents at the same location. The linear fit of the data shows a slope of 260.7 V/A. (b) Surface potentials measured at various locations with a bias current of 10 ma. The slope of the linear fitted line of surface potentials measured in the x-direction is 1.20 mv/μm.

Figure 3. (a) STM topography and (b) surface potential map of a gold nanoparticle on the tungsten film. The bias current is 10 ma with the direction indicated in (b).

Figure 4. (a) Tunneling currents in the presence of bias current pulses with different amplitudes. The tunneling gap voltage was maintained at 0.5 V for all the measurements. Inset: atomic force microscopy study on the tungsten film in the presence of bias current pulses. (b) Difference in tunneling currents measured at tunneling voltages of -0.5 V and 0.5 V in the presence of identical current pulses. Inset: the normalized difference to the mean of the tunneling currents measured at 0.5V and -0.5 V.

Reference: 1 S. Yoshimoto, Y. Murata, K. Kubo, K. Tomita, K. Motoyoshi, T. Kimura, H. Okino, R. Hobara, I. Matsuda and S.-i. Honda, Nano Lett. 7, 956 (2007). 2 O. Kubo, Y. Shingaya, M. Nakaya, M. Aono and T. Nakayama, Appl. Phys. Lett. 88, 254101 (2006). 3 P. Willke, T. Druga, R. G. Ulbrich, M. A. Schneider and M. Wenderoth, Nat. Commun. 6, 6399 (2015). 4 W. Wang, K. Munakata, M. Rozler and M. R. Beasley, Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 236802 (2013). 5 C.-F. Pai, L. Liu, Y. Li, H. Tseng, D. Ralph and R. Buhrman, Appl. Phys. Lett. 101, 122404 (2012). 6 Q. Hao, W. Chen and G. Xiao, Appl. Phys. Lett. 106, 182403 (2015). 7 M. Dyakonov and V. Perel, Phys. Lett. A 35, 459 (1971). 8 J. Hirsch, Phys. Rev. Lett. 83, 1834 (1999).