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Published byDominick Hardy Modified over 6 years ago
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Electrochemical Etching of W and Ag Tips for STM and STM-Light Emission Studies
Conor Omand Supervisor: Sarah Burke
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Introduction Defined by Radius of Curvature (RoC)
Ideally 1 atom at the apex RoC < 200nm usable (with manipulation) Last atom wins Not Good Enough Good Enough
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Mechanical Manipulation
Cutting, grinding, fracturing Irreproducible and asymmetric with RoC not well defined Generally look bad under characterization, but can be extremely sharp Mechanical Manipulation
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Electrochemical Etching
More reproducible way to make sharp, symmetric tips Look good under characterization RoC well defined Electrochemical Etching
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Tip Materials Commonly made of W or Pt-Ir
W is mechanically stable and easy to etch, but oxidizes readily in air. Pt-Ir is inert in air, but difficult to etch Can be made from almost any metal (Au, Ag, Ni, Cr, Fe, etc.) or from carbon nanotubes I focus on W and Ag
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Method Applied power triggers an electrolytic redox reaction
The metal is oxidized into an ion and leaves into solution Method
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Reactions For W: Cathode: 6H2O + 6e- -> 3H2(g) + 6OH-
Anode: W(s) + 8OH- -> WO4-2 +4H2O + 6e- Overall: W(s) + 2OH- + 2H2O -> WO H2(g) For Ag: Cathode: 2H+ + 2e- -> H2(g) Anode: Ag(s) -> Ag+ + e- Overall: 3Ag(s) + C3H4OH(COOH)3 -> Ag3C3H4OH(COO)3 + 3/2H2(g)
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Step 3: Scanning Electron Microscope (~500 000X)
Tip Characterization Step 1: Stereo-Optical Microscope (8X) Step 2: Compound Optical Microscope (500X) Step 3: Scanning Electron Microscope (~ X) Step 4: STM use
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In-Situ Manipulation Pre-Scan: Annealing Sputtering Field Evaporation
During Scan: Voltage Pulses Controlled Crash Field Emission
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Goal To find an etching recipe for each material that:
Gives reproducible results Gives tips with RoC < 200nm Is quick and simple Parameters to vary: Applied voltage Electrolyte Concentration Gap Size Voltage type (AC/DC)
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Preliminary Results Recipe for W Etching: 3M KOH
0.5mm or 0.7mm gap size 4-10V DC or 2.5-4V AC Recipe for Ag Etching: 40% or 50% w/w Citric Acid 40-60V AC
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Some things that can go wrong
Preliminary Results Some things that can go wrong Bending Curling Fracture Contamination
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More things that can go wrong
Preliminary Results More things that can go wrong Crystal Deposits Hair -> Bluntness SEM-Induced Carbon Growth
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Preliminary Results Success? Nanometer Scale Micron Scale Not too bad
Not too good
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Preliminary Results Success! W, RoC ~ 150nm W, RoC < 50nm
Ag, RoC < 50nm
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Preliminary Results 13 tips with RoC < 200nm (12 W, 1 Ag)
Reproducible etching times with W 2 tips left SEM uncharacterized for STM use
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What's to Come? Cleaner, more controlled etching
Test recipes that look promising Etch enough tips to find a success rate for each recipe Get a reproducible time for Ag etching Characterize tips by using them in STM Experimentation documentation for those who wish to repeat the experiment
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Thank You for Listening
Any Questions?
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