Simplified feedback control system for Scanning Tunneling Microscopy

Abstract

A Scanning Tunneling Microscope (STM) is one of the most important scanning probe tools available to study and manipulate matter at the nanoscale. In a STM, a tip is scanned on top of a surface with a separation of a few . Often, the tunneling current between tip and sample is maintained constant by modifying the distance between the tip apex and the surface through a feedback mechanism acting on a piezoelectric transducer. This produces very detailed images of the electronic properties of the surface. The feedback mechanism is nearly always made using a digital processing circuit separate from the user computer. Here we discuss another approach, using a computer and data acquisition through the USB port. We find that it allows succesful ultra low noise studies of surfaces at cryogenic temperatures. We show results on different compounds, a type II Weyl semimetal (WTe2), a quasi two-dimensional dichalcogenide superconductor (2H-NbSe2), a magnetic Weyl semimetal (Co3Sn2S2) and an iron pnictide superconductor (FeSe).

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