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Near-field microwave microscopy of one-dimensional nanostructures

Published

Author(s)

Samuel Berweger, Paul T. Blanchard, Rebecca C. Quardokus, Frank W. DelRio, Thomas Mitchell (Mitch) Wallis, Pavel Kabos, Sergiy Krylyuk, Albert Davydov

Abstract

With the ability to measure sample conductivity with nanometer spatial resolution, scanning microwave microscopy (SMM) is a powerful tool to study nanoscale electronic systems and devices. Here we demonstrate the general capability to image electronic variations within nanomaterials using nanowires of VO2 and Si as model systems. For VO2 we image the temperature-dependent metal-insulator domain coexistence that arises due to the built-in strain in substrate-clamped wires. In Si NWs integrated into a transistor device architecture we observe large increases in the source-drain current with the tip passing over the wire, correlated with variations in the SMM signal. We attribute this effect to local rectification of the microwave signal by the local tip-sample Schottky junction.
Proceedings Title
International Microwave Symposium
Conference Dates
May 23-27, 2016
Conference Location
San Francisco, CA, US

Citation

Berweger, S. , Blanchard, P. , Quardokus, R. , DelRio, F. , Wallis, T. , Kabos, P. , Krylyuk, S. and Davydov, A. (2016), Near-field microwave microscopy of one-dimensional nanostructures, International Microwave Symposium, San Francisco, CA, US (Accessed April 23, 2024)
Created May 22, 2016, Updated February 9, 2023