4.8 Article

Ultrafast Photon-Induced Tunneling Microscopy

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 15, Issue 11, Pages 18071-18084

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c06716

Keywords

ultrashort pulses; atomic space-time resolution; angstrom-femtosecond resolution; 4D tunneling microscopy; ultrafast optical STM techniques

Funding

  1. Max Planck Society

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The unification of ultrafast science techniques and scanning tunneling microscopy has the potential to track electronic motion in molecules in real space and time. By adjusting the DC bias at the STM junction, selective dipole coupling of electronic states by photons can be controlled, allowing for high spatial and temporal resolution.
Unification of the techniques of ultrafast science and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) has the potential of tracking electronic motion in molecules simultaneously in real space and real time. Laser pulses can couple to an STM junction either in the weak-field or in the strong-field interaction regime. The strong-field regime entails significant modification (dressing) of the tunneling barrier of the STM junction, whereas the weak-field or the photon-driven regime entails perturbative interaction. Here, we describe how photons carried in an ultrashort pulse interact with an STM junction, defining the basic fundamental framework of ultrafast photon-induced tunneling microscopy. Selective dipole coupling of electronic states by photons is shown to be controllable by adjusting the DC bias at the STM junction. An ultrafast tunneling microscopy involving photons is established. Consolidation of the technique calls for innovative approaches to detect photon-induced tunneling currents at the STM junction. We introduce and characterize here three techniques involving dispersion, polarization, and frequency modulation of the laser pulses to lock-in detect the laser-induced tunneling current. We show that photon-induced tunneling currents can simultaneously achieve angstrom scale spatial resolution and sub-femtosecond temporal resolution. Ultrafast photon-induced tunneling microscopy will be able to directly probe electron dynamics in complex molecular systems, without the need of reconstruction techniques.

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