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Probing quantum wells induced above a subsurface nanocavity in copper

Authors :
de Wjm Wim Jonge
O Oleg Kurnosikov
B Bert Koopmans
O.A.O. Adam
Hjm Henk Swagten
Physics of Nanostructures
Eindhoven Hendrik Casimir institute
Source :
Physical Review B, 77(12):125429, 125429-1/7. American Physical Society
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
American Physical Society (APS), 2008.

Abstract

Argon-filled nanocavities embedded in a single crystal of copper near the surface reflect electrons and induce a quantum well (QW) between the nanocavity and the atomically flat Cu(001) surface. The spatial variation of conductance at the surface above the nanocavity was studied by scanning tunnelling microscopy and/or spectroscopy. Interference features were observed over several nanometers at some locations on the surface. In the [100] and [010] directions, the interference fringes propagate over longer distances up to tens of nanometers. In addition to these spatially resolved features, the conductance reveals an oscillatory behavior as a function of energy of injected electrons. A model taking into account the specific shape of the nanocavity, as well as the band structure of copper, allows us to simulate the spatial variation of the conductance in close agreement with the experiment. The modeling demonstrates that not only the specific shape of the subsurface nanocavity reflecting electrons is crucial to explain the observed pattern, but also the anisotropy of the band structure and the phenomenon of focusing of hot electrons connected to it. Our approach opens up opportunities to examine buried nano-objects with scanning tunneling microscopy, and also to study how the anisotropy of a crystal influences the spatial variation of QW properties.

Details

ISSN :
1550235X and 10980121
Volume :
77
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physical Review B
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....afe06570ed2ce31d7cabdf226bbbcc23
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.77.125429