Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) is one of the most powerful techniques for the analysis of surface reconstructions at the atomic scale. It utilizes a sharp tip, which is brought close to the surface with a bias voltage applied between the tip and the sample. The value of the tunneling current, flowing between the tip and the sample, is determined by the structure of the surface and the tip, the bias voltage, and the tip‐sample distance. By scanning the tip over the surface, a tunneling current map is produced, which reflects the local atomic and electronic structures. This chapter focuses on the role of the tip‐surface distance in ultrahigh vacuum STM experiments with atomic and subatomic resolution. At small distances, i.e., comparable with interatomic distances in solids, the interaction between the tip and the surface atoms can modify their electronic structure changing the symmetry of the atomically resolved STM images and producing unusual features at the subatomic scale. These features are related to changes of the relative contribution of different electron orbitals of the tip and the surface atoms at varying distances.
Part of the book: Microscopy and Analysis
Few-layer graphene exhibits exceptional properties that are of interest for fundamental research and technological applications. Nanostructured graphene with self-aligned domain boundaries and ripples is one of very promising materials because the boundaries can reflect electrons in a wide range of energies and host spin-polarized electronic states. In this chapter, we discuss the ultra-high vacuum synthesis of few-layer graphene on the technologically relevant semiconducting β-SiC/Si(001) wafers. Recent experimental results demonstrate the possibility of controlling the preferential domain boundary direction and the number of graphene layers in the few-layer graphene synthesized on the β-SiC/Si(001) substrates. Both these goals can be achieved utilizing vicinal silicon wafers with small miscuts from the (001) plane. This development may lead to fabricating new tunable electronic nanostructures made from graphene on β-SiC, opening up opportunities for new applications.
Part of the book: Silicon Materials