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To: Webster Groves who wrote (94685)12/5/2001 2:21:48 AM
From: The Ox  Respond to of 95453
 
Here's an olive branch for the gold bugs: lol

STMs Make Mountains out of
Molehills


Scanning tunneling microscopes (STMs)
are among the most popular tools in modern
science, but a group of theorists has some
doubts about their accuracy. The group's
computer simulations, which are reported in
the 3 December print issue of PRL, show
that interactions between the STM tip and
the surface can distort the instrument's
measurements. The results could lead to
more accurate techniques and better
algorithms for STM image processing.

STMs use a needle tipped with a single
atom to take pictures of surfaces.
Researchers apply a voltage to the probe,
which induces a faint "tunneling" current
from the surface into the tip. By recording
changes in the current as they move the tip, scientists create a topographical
image of an atomic surface.

In the two decades since their invention, STMs have been used to take snapshots
of everything from rat cells to quantum dots, but theorists have yet to gain a
thorough understanding of how they work. The problem, says Werner Hofer of
University College in London, is that the interactions between the tip and the
surface are difficult to model. "All the effects you could possibly imagine come into
play," Hofer says. "You have forces, fields, excitations--it's a very complicated
situation." Several teams have modeled STMs, but the results have been
contradictory and lacked the hard numbers experimentalists need to improve
image processing.

To get results that experimentalists could use, Hofer--along with a collaboration of
British and Canadian researchers--performed the most sophisticated computer
simulation to date of the atoms in the tip and surface. By precisely modeling the
outer electrons of the atoms involved, the team found that there is an attraction
between the tip and surface. The attraction is so strong, according to Hofer, that it
pulls atoms from the surface up to one atomic radius out of their normal positions.
The change in distance alters the tunneling current and distorts the STM
image--making a surface appear "rougher" than it actually is. Hofer believes that
this distortion could explain why measurements of a gold sheet's topography
appear bumpier than theories predict.


"It might seem surprising that it's taken two decades for STM measurements to
become fully quantitative," says Mark Freeman of the University of Alberta in
Canada. "But the delay is a testament to the magnitude of the challenge." Freeman
calls the work a "tour-de-atomic-force," which--along with a few other recent
studies--will give researchers an exact understanding of their instruments.

--Geoff Brumfiel