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1.
Nat Nanotechnol ; 18(10): 1154-1161, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37488219

ABSTRACT

Stacking engineering in van der Waals (vdW) materials is a powerful method to control topological electronic phases for quantum device applications. Atomic intercalation into the vdW material can modulate the stacking structure at the atomic scale without a highly technical protocol. Here we report that lithium intercalation in a topologically structured graphene/buffer system on SiC(0001) drives dynamic topological domain wall (TDW) motions associated with stacking order change by using an in situ aberration-corrected low-energy electron microscope in combination with theoretical modelling. We observe sequential and selective lithium intercalation that starts at topological crossing points (AA stacking) and then selectively extends to AB stacking domains. Lithium intercalation locally changes the domain stacking order to AA and in turn alters the neighbouring TDW stacking orders, and continuous intercalation drives the evolution of the whole topological structure network. Our work reveals moving TDWs protected by the topology of stacking and lays the foundation for controlling the stacking structure via atomic intercalation. These findings open up new avenues to realize intercalation-driven vdW electronic devices.

2.
ACS Nano ; 16(3): 3582-3592, 2022 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35209713

ABSTRACT

Ca-intercalation has enabled superconductivity in graphene on SiC. However, the atomic and electronic structures that are critical for superconductivity are still under discussion. We find an essential role of the interface between monolayer graphene and the SiC substrate for superconductivity. In the Ca-intercalation process, at the interface a carbon layer terminating SiC changes to graphene by Ca-termination of SiC (monolayer graphene becomes a bilayer), inducing more electrons than a free-standing model. Then, Ca is intercalated in between the graphene layers, which shows superconductivity with the updated critical temperature (TC) of up to 5.7 K. In addition, the relation between TC and the normal-state conductivity is unusual, "dome-shaped". These findings are beyond the simple C6CaC6 model in which s-wave BCS superconductivity is theoretically predicted. This work proposes a general picture of the intercalation-induced superconductivity in graphene on SiC and indicates the potential for superconductivity induced by other intercalants.

3.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 5(11): 1953-7, 2014 Jun 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26273879

ABSTRACT

Photocatalytic activity is determined by the transport property of photoexcited carriers from the interior to the surface of photocatalysts. Because the carrier dynamics is influenced by a space charge layer (SCL) in the subsurface region, an understanding of the effect of the potential barrier of the SCL on the carrier behavior is essential. Here we have investigated the relaxation time of the photoexcited carriers on single-crystal anatase and rutile TiO2 surfaces by time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy and found that carrier recombination, taking a nanosecond time scale at room temperature, is strongly influenced by the barrier height of the SCL. Under the flat-band condition, which is realized in nanometer-sized photocatalysts, the carriers have a longer lifetime on the anatase surface than the rutile one, naturally explaining the higher photocatalytic activity for anatase than rutile.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 106(11): 116802, 2011 Mar 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21469886

ABSTRACT

We have succeeded in detecting metallic transport in a monatomic layer of In on an Si(111) surface, Si(111)-sqrt[7]×sqrt[3]-In surface reconstruction, using the micro-four-point probe method. The In layer exhibited conductivity higher than the minimum metallic conductivity (the Ioffe-Regel criterion) and kept the metallic temperature dependence of resistivity down to 10 K. This is the first example of a monatomic layer, with the exception of graphene, showing metallic transport without carrier localization at cryogenic temperatures. By introducing defects on this surface, a metal-insulator transition occurred due to Anderson localization, showing hopping conduction.

5.
Phys Rev Lett ; 99(14): 146805, 2007 Oct 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17930700

ABSTRACT

Temperature-dependent electron transport in a metallic surface superstructure, Si(111)sqrt[3] x sqrt[3]-Ag, was studied by a micro-four-point probe method and photoemission spectroscopy. The surface-state conductivity exhibits a sharp transition from metallic conduction to strong localization at approximately 150 K. The metallic regime is due to electron-phonon interaction while the localization seemingly originates from coherency of electron waves. Random potential variations, caused by Friedel oscillations of surface electrons around defects, likely induce strong carrier localization.

6.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 78(5): 053705, 2007 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17552823

ABSTRACT

The authors have developed an ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) variable-temperature four-tip scanning tunneling microscope (STM), operating from room temperature down to 7 K, combined with a scanning electron microscope (SEM). Four STM tips are mechanically and electrically independent and capable of positioning in arbitrary configurations in nanometer precision. An integrated controller system for both of the multitip STM and SEM with a single computer has also been developed, which enables the four tips to operate either for STM imaging independently and for four-point probe (4PP) conductivity measurements cooperatively. Atomic-resolution STM images of graphite were obtained simultaneously by the four tips. Conductivity measurements by 4PP method were also performed at various temperatures with the four tips in square arrangement with direct contact to the sample surface.


Subject(s)
Image Enhancement/instrumentation , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/instrumentation , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Microscopy, Scanning Tunneling/instrumentation , Transducers , Equipment Design , Equipment Failure Analysis , Image Enhancement/methods , Microscopy, Scanning Tunneling/methods , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity , Temperature
7.
Nano Lett ; 7(4): 956-9, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17385933

ABSTRACT

We performed four-terminal conductivity measurements on a CoSi2 nanowire (NW) at room temperature by using PtIr-coated carbon nanotube (CNT) tips in a four-tip scanning tunneling microscope. The physical stability and high aspect ratio of the CNT tips made it possible to reduce the probe spacing down to ca. 30 nm. The probe-spacing dependence of resistance showed diffusive transport even at 30 nm and no current leakage to the Si substrate.


Subject(s)
Electrochemistry/instrumentation , Equipment Failure Analysis/instrumentation , Iridium/chemistry , Materials Testing/instrumentation , Microelectrodes , Nanotubes, Carbon/chemistry , Platinum/chemistry , Electric Impedance , Electrochemistry/methods , Equipment Design , Equipment Failure Analysis/methods , Materials Testing/methods , Nanotubes, Carbon/ultrastructure
8.
Phys Rev Lett ; 96(3): 036803, 2006 Jan 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16486752

ABSTRACT

Using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we investigate changes in the band dispersion of a free-electron-like surface state of [FORMULA: SEE TEXT], induced by adsorption of submonolayer Au adatoms. At room temperature, where the adatoms are in a two-dimensional adatom-gas phase, electrons are transferred from the Au adatoms to the substrate, shifting the surface band downwards and causing it to deviate from a parabolic dispersion. At 135 K where the Au adatoms are frozen at specific sites of the substrate, the band splits into two. This band splitting can be explained in terms of hybridization between the unperturbed surface band and the localized virtual bound states induced by the Au adatoms.

9.
Phys Rev Lett ; 93(23): 236801, 2004 Dec 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15601184

ABSTRACT

We have succeeded in measuring the resistance across a single atomic step through a monatomic-layer metal on a crystal surface, Si(111)(sqrt[3]xsqrt[3])-Ag, using three independent methods, which yielded consistent values of the resistance. Two of the methods were direct measurements with monolithic microscopic four-point probes and four-tip scanning tunneling microscope probes. The third method was the analysis of electron standing waves near step edges, combined with the Landauer formula for 2D conductors. The conductivity across a monatomic step was determined to be about 5 x 10(3) Omega(-1) m(-1). Electron transport across an atomic step is modeled as a tunneling process through an energy-barrier height approximately equal to the work function.

10.
Phys Rev Lett ; 91(3): 036805, 2003 Jul 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12906438

ABSTRACT

We have devised a "square micro-four-point probe method" using an independently driven ultrahigh-vacuum four-tip scanning tunneling microscope, and succeeded for the first time to directly measure anisotropic electrical conductance of a single-atomic layer on a solid surface. A quasi-one-dimensional metal of a single-domain Si(111)4 x 1-In had a surface-state conductance along the metallic atom chains (sigma(axially)) to be 7.2(+/-0.6) x 10(-4) S/square at room temperature, which was larger than that in the perpendicular direction (sigma(radially)) by approximately 60 times. The sigma(axially) was consistently interpreted by a Boltzmann equation with the anisotropic surface-state band dispersion, while the sigma(radially) was dominated by a surface-space-charge-layer conductance.

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