Title: Development of One-Dimensional Band Structure in Artificial Gold Chains
1Development of One-Dimensional Band Structure in
Artificial Gold Chains
- Ken Loh
- Ph.D. Student, Dept. of Civil Environmental
Engineering - Sung Hyun Jo
- Pre-candidate, Dept. of Electrical Engineering
Computer Science - EECS 598 Intro. To Nanoelectronics
- September 27, 2005
2Research Motivation
- While band structure engineering in semiconductor
technology has been successful, it is only the
beginning for the tailoring of electronic
properties of nanosized metal structures. - Critical length scale smaller than semiconductors
- Due to high electron density and efficient
screening in metals - Possessing control over size-dependent electronic
structures allow an adjustment of intrinsic
material properties for a wide range of
applications. - Purpose is to utilize experiments to determine
the interrelation between geometric structure,
elemental composition, and electronic properties
in metallic nanostructures.
3Experimental Preparation
- Preparation and analysis of well-defined
nanosized structures remain the biggest challenge
for studying the transition from atomic to
bulklike electronic behavior. - Experiments take advantage of the scanning
tunneling microscope (STM) to manipulate single
atoms on metal surfaces. - Linear gold (Au) chains were built on Nickel
Aluminide, NiAl(110), one atom at a time.
4Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM)
- Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM) is used
widely to obtain atomic-scale 3-dimensional
profile images of metal surfaces. - Applications include,
- Characterizing surface roughness
- Observing surface defects
- Determining the size and conformation of
molecules and aggregates
STM image, 7x7 nm, of a single zig-zag chain of
Cs atoms (red) on GaAs(110) surface.
STM image, 35x35 nm, of single substitutional Cr
impurities on Fe(001) surface.
5STM Operation Principles
- Electron clouds associated with a metal surface
extends a very small distance above the surface. - A very sharp tip is treated so that a single atom
projects from its end is brought close to the
surface. - Strong interaction between the electron cloud on
the surface and that of the tip causes an
electric tunneling current to flow under applied
voltage - Tunneling current rapidly increases as distance
is decreased - Rapid change of tunneling current allows for
atomic resolution
Left STM image of standing wave patterns in the
local density-of-states of a Cu(111) surface.
6Experimental Sample
- The NiAl(110) single crystal substrate
- Prepared by alternating cycles of Ne sputtering
and annealing _at_ 1300 K. - Linear Au chains added one atom at a time _at_ 12 K.
- Preferential adsorption side as bridge positions
on Ni troughs which alternated with protruding Al
rows on alloy surface - Their electronic properties were derived from
scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) to reveal
the evolution of a 1D band structure from a
single atomic orbital.
7Linear Au Chain
Above STM topographic images showing
intermediate stages of building a Au20 chain.
8Stability Issues
- At low tunnel resistance (V/I lt 150 kOhm), single
Au atom can be moved across the surface - Jumps from one to the next adsorption site as it
follows trajectory of the tip - Pulling mode
- Increasing the resistance above 1 GOhm provide
stable conditions for imaging and spectroscopy - Controlled manipulation used to build 1-D chains
along Ni troughs - Atom-atom separation given by distance between Ni
bridge sites (2.89 Å) - Individual Au atoms indistinguishable in chain,
thus indicating a strong overlap of their atomic
wave functions.
9Electronic Properties of Au Chain
- Electronic properties of Au chain determined by
STS. - Detects derivative of tunneling current as a
function of sample bias with open feedback loop - Tunneling conductance (dI/dV) gives measure of
local density-of-state (DOS) - Probing empty state of NiAl(110) at positive
sample bias reveals a smooth increase in
conductivity. - Reflects DOS of the NiAl sp-band
10Conductivity Spectra
- Conductivity spectra for bare NiAl and for Au
chains with different lengths. - Spectra taken at center of chain
- Tunneling gap set at
11What About Au?
- In contrast, STS of a Au monomer dominated by a
Gaussian-shaped conductivity peak centered at
1.95 V. - Enhanced conductance is attributed to resonant
tunneling into an empty state in the Au atom. - Localization outside the atom in the tip-sample
junction points to a lowly decaying state with sp
character - Arises from hybridization of atomic Au orbitals
and NiAl states
12More Au Atoms
- Moving second Au atom into neighbor position on
the Ni row leads to a dramatic change of
electronic properties. - Single resonance at 1.95 V splits into a doublet
with peaks at 1.50 and 2.25 V - Indicates strong coupling between the two atoms
- Individual conductivity resonances become
indistinguishable for chains containing more than
3 atoms - Due to overlap between neighboring peaks and
finite peak width of 0.35 V - Continue adding more atoms to the chain cause
downshift of lowest energy peak
13Quantum Well, Wire Dot
Quantum Well
Bulk
Quantum Wire (On-edge growth modulation doping)
Quantum Dot
14The Infinite Potential Well
- The potential energy
- The time independent Schroedingers equation
- Since the electron cannot possible be found
outside the well, the probability distribution
function ( ) must be zero. And the
boundary condition -
- then
15The Infinite Potential Well
- The allowed energy and the corresponding wave
function - The first five energy levels and wave functions
(a)
(b)
- Energy levels
- Wave functions
16Tunneling
- The electron can pass through the barrier, even
if the region of space is classically forbidden.
An electron approaches a finite potential
barrier B Classically forbidden region
The probability density function
17Tunneling
- The wave function of the incident electron in
region A - In the forbidden region (neglecting the
reflection at the boundary) - At , must be continuous. Then, in
region C (neglecting the reflection at the
boundary)
18Tunneling
- The probability density function in forbidden
region (the region B) - The probability density function is a decaying
exponential function - The probability that the electron will penetrate
the barrier (by neglecting the reflection at the
boundaries)
(e.g. as for
,
)
19Tunneling
- The tunneling probability of arbitrary shape
potential (WKB approximation)
Wave function of a particle with energy E
tunneling through a quantum barrier
20Resonant Tunneling Diode
- Band diagram of resonant tunneling diode
- Band diagram of n-type resonant tunneling
structure - The ground state wave function in the well
21Resonant Tunneling Diode
- Band diagram and voltage-current characteristic
of a resonant tunneling structure under different
bias
22The Width of Resonance
- Linewidth of current resonance peak
- The broadening mechanisms
- Inhomogeneous broadening
- Homogeneous broadening
23The Width of Resonance
- Inhomogeneous broadening mechanisms
- caused by inhomogeneities of the
structure - Quantum well thickness fluctuations
- Alloy fluctuations in the well and barriers
- Homogeneous broadening mechanisms
- caused by lifetime broadening
- The uncertainty principle
- The energy of a quantum mechanical state can be
obtained with highest precision (small ),
if the uncertainty in time is large, i.e. for
transitions with a long lifetimes. The energetic
width of transitions given by the uncertainty
principle is called the natural linewidth.
is the time that the electron dwells in the
quantum well.
24Experiment Process
- The one of the goals is to reveal the dispersion
relation (E-K diagram) of Au chains and to
verify the related theories. - What we can do are the preparation of nanosized
Au chains the measurement of conductance versus
applied voltage from the samples. - Then how?
- From the results of dI/dV patterns, we can
obtain a set of finite number of discrete energy
levels En . After this step, by using an
applicable theoretical dispersion relation
model, the E-K relation can be described. Or
inversely, we can verify the correlated theories.
25Experiment
- The observed conductivity pattern ( dI/dV )
results from - The electron transport through the 1D quantum
well is limited to a finite number of En - The conductivity is determined by the squared
wave function - The each energy levels has the finite width
- More than one state contributes to the
differential conductance at a selected sample
bias - patterns are
superposition of several wave functions
26Conductivity Patterns versus Bias
- We can expect that each conductivity pattern has
peaks with finite width (linewidth)
Experimental results
The contribution of to
conductivity patterns will vary continuously
according to the bias depends on energy
and has a peak with finite width
27Formation of Energy Bands
- We already know well regarding a single atom and
bulk itself. And we also know some theories.
However we need to confirm those things again by
actual experimental data.
Experimental results
As the N atoms are brought together, the
discrete energy level split into N levels. (The
Bonding the anti-bonding orbital)
Each conductivity peaks is indistinguishable
The energy band is formed
28The Lowest peak?
- In density of states of 1D, there is a instant
start. As the number of the Au atoms goes to
infinity, the result can be more ideal.
Experimental results
29- To determine the coefficient is
fitted to the observed dI/dV pattern - It is reasonable to consider the position of
energy that has peak value as the energy
position of an electronic state En in quantum well
Selected coefficients obtained from the fitting
procedure of conductivity patterns
30Dispersion Relation
- Because of the well defined geometry of Au chains
on NiAl(110), a 1D quantum well with infinite
walls can be used. And the presence of a pseudo
band gap in the DOS of NiAl(110) locate above the
Fermi level
(a)
(b)
(a) Real space representation of the NiAl (110)
surface (b) The first layer is rippled (S. C.
Lui et al. Phy. Rev. B39 13149 (1989))
31Dispersion Relation
- The allowed energy
- The points are aligned on a parabolic
curve. From fitting to the theoretical dispersion
relation
Dispersion relation of electronic states for a
Au20 chain
32- Mapping the conductivity at different positions
along a chain reveals a characteristic intensity
pattern
At the both ends of the chain there are non ideal
properties (e.g. surface state)
- Conductivity spectra taken along Au20 with
tunneling gap set at Vsample 2.5V, I1nA - (C) Vertical cuts through dI/dV spectra shown (A)
at three exemplary energies
33- The 1D particle in the box model oversimplifies
the electronic properties in Au chains - The interaction between single Au atoms in the
chains results from a direct overlap between the
Au wave functions and substrate-mediated
mechanisms (e.g. Friedel oscillation) - Beside forming direct chemical bonds at short
separations, atoms and molecules interact
indirectly over large distance via relaxation in
the lattice of substrate atoms on which they are
absorbed. - The effect of the indirect interaction depends on
the adsorbate separation and is important for
adsorbate-metal systems with weak ad-ad bonds or
a weakly corrugated surface. - The strong electron-phonon coupling occurring in
1D system changes the periodicity along atomic
chains (Peierls distortion)
34Conclusion
- This experiments demonstrate an approach to
studying the correlation between geometric and
electronic properties of well-defined 1D
structures - The investigation of 2D and even 3D objects built
from single atom is envisioned