Scanning Tunneling Optical Resonance Microscopy Developed
2004
The ability to determine the in situ optoelectronic properties of semiconductor materials has become especially important as the size of device architectures has decreased and the development of complex microsystems has increased. Scanning Tunneling Optical Resonance Microscopy, or STORM, can interrogate the optical bandgap as a function of its position within a semiconductor micro-structure. This technique uses a tunable solidstate titanium-sapphire laser whose output is "chopped" using a spatial light modulator and is coupled by a fiber-optic connector to a scanning tunneling microscope in order to illuminate the tip-sample junction. The photoenhanced portion of the tunneling current is spectroscopically measured using a lock-in technique. The capabilities of this technique were verified using semiconductor microstructure calibration standards that were grown by organometallic vapor-phase epitaxy. Bandgaps characterized by STORM measurements were found to be in good agreement with the bulk values determined by transmission spectroscopy and photoluminescence and with the theoretical values that were based on x-ray diffraction results.
Keywords:
- Scanning confocal electron microscopy
- Scanning probe microscopy
- Electrochemical scanning tunneling microscope
- Scanning tunneling spectroscopy
- Microscopy
- Scanning ion-conductance microscopy
- Scanning tunneling microscope
- Analytical chemistry
- Spin polarized scanning tunneling microscopy
- Materials science
- Optoelectronics
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