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Pseudo-wetting Behaviour of Nanostructures Induced by STM

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 February 2011

Paul Campbell
Affiliation:
p.a.campbell@dundee.ac.uk, University of Dundee, Carnegie Physics Laboratory, Ewing Building, Main Campus, Nethergate, Dundee, DD1 4HN, United Kingdom, 01382 384404
George Walmsley
Affiliation:
dg.walmsley@qub.ac.uk, Queen's University Belfast, School of Physics and Mathematics, University Road, Belfast, BT7 1NN, United Kingdom
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Abstract

The behavior of nano-scale liquid metal droplets has recently received renewed research interest following the exciting new observations of Sutter and Sutter [1]. In the present paper, we consider whether similar conditions can be generated for observing liquid metal droplet phenomena in a scanning probe architecture. Strong interactions between tip and sample in tunnelling microscopies can be deliberately invoked by lowering the tunnel gap impedance. Indeed, nanoscale features may be created this may, often exhibiting temporal stability suggestive of applications for ultra high density data storage. Alternatively, unstable features may form, and their decay characteristics can be related to local dynamics and kinetics. In real liquids, one such evolutionary mode involves the phenomenon of wetting, and the formation of thin precursor films. Here, it is demonstrated that a similar process may occur for the decay of a nanoscale mound of [presumed] Au atoms onto an Au(111) substrate. The mound is thought to be created by a ‘jump-to-contact’ process when the gap impedance, Zg, is deliberately lowered by reducing the tip-surface displacement. Resultant features have a diameter of circa 30nm, and heights of up to l0nm. They appear stable when scanned repeatedly at gap impedances higher than 10MΩ, however if Zg is lowered below 500kΩ, then morphology can alter dynamically, and a thin layer of material, only two atomic widths thick, is seen to emanate from the periphery. Relaxation in the nanostructure is observed. Interestingly, the observations agree qualitatively with wetting phenomena observed on microscale droplets of involatile liquids on solid surfaces. Favourable comparisons may also be drawn in the light of recent results using molecular-dynamics simulations and Monte-Carlo methods.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2008

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References

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