A nanofabricated, monolithic, path-separated electron interferometer

Abstract

We report a self-aligned, monolithic electron interferometer, consisting of two 45 nm thick silicon layers separated by 20 μm. This interferometer was fabricated from a single crystal silicon cantilever on a transmission electron microscope grid by gallium focused ion-beam milling. Using this interferometer, we demonstrate beam path-separation, and obtain interference fringes in a Mach-Zehnder geometry, in an unmodified 200 kV transmission electron microscope. The fringes have a period of 0.32 nm, which corresponds to the [111] lattice planes of silicon, and a maximum contrast of 15 %. This design can potentially be scaled to millimeter-scale, and used in electron holography. It can also be applied to perform fundamental physics experiments, such as interaction-free measurement with electrons.

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