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Scanning gate microscopy



Scanning gate microscopy (SGM) is a scanning probe microscopy technique with an electrically conductive tip used as a movable gate that couples capacitively to the sample and probes electrical transport on the nanometer scale. Typical samples are mesoscopic devices, often based on semiconductor heterostructures, such as quantum point contacts or quantum dots. Carbon nanotubes too have been investigated.

In SGM one measures the sample's electrical conductance as a function of tip position and tip potential. This is in contrast to other microscopy techniques where the tip is used as a sensor, e.g., for forces.

SGMs were developed in the late 1990s from atomic force microscopes. Most importantly, these had to be adapted for use at low temperatures, often 4 kelvins or less, as the samples under study do not work at higher temperatures. Today an estimated number of ten research groups worldwide use the technique.

References

  • Coherent Branched Flow in a Two-Dimensional Electron Gas: A. Topinka et al., Nature 410, 183 (2001)
  • Scanned Probe Imaging of Single-Electron Charge States in Nanotube Quantum Dots: M. T. Woodside and P. L. McEuen, Science 296, 1098 (2002)
  • Spatially Resolved Manipulation of Single Electrons in Quantum Dots Using a Scanned Probe: A. Pioda et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 216801 (2004)
  • Imaging and controlling electron transport inside a quantum ring: B. Hackens et al., Nature Phys. 2, 826 (2006)


 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Scanning_gate_microscopy". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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