4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Atomically precise self-assembly of one-dimensional structures on silicon

Journal

APPLIED SURFACE SCIENCE
Volume 254, Issue 1, Pages 4-11

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.apsusc.2007.07.085

Keywords

low-dimensional structures; atomic wires; silicon surfaces; one-dimensional physics; scanning tunneling microscopy; scanning tunneling spectroscopy; photoelectron spectroscopy

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This work has three main themes: (1) fabricate atomically precise nanostructures at surfaces, particularly nanowires consisting of atom chains; (2) explore the behavior of one-dimensional electrons in atomic chains; (3) find the fundamental limits of data storage using an atomic scale memory. Semiconductor surfaces lend themselves towards self-assembly, because the broken covalent bonds create elaborate reconstruction patterns to minimize the surface energy. An example is the large 7 x 7 unit cell on Si(1 1 1), which can be used as building block. On semiconductors, the surface electrons completely de-couple from the substrate, as long as their energy lies in the band gap. Angle-resolved photoemission reveals surprising features, such as a fractional band filling and a spin-splitting at a non-magnetic surface. An interesting by-product is a memory structure with self-assembled tracks that are five atom rows wide and store a bit by the presence or absence of a single silicon atom. This toy memory is used to test the fundamental limits of data storage and to see how storage on silicon compares to storage in DNA. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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