APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session D5: Industrial Physics Forum: Frontiers in Physics
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Monday, March 21, 2011
Room: Ballroom C1
Sponsoring
Unit:
FIAP
Chair: Ernesto Marinaro, Hitachi San Jose Research Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.D5.2
Abstract: D5.00002 : Scanning Tunneling Microscopy of Dirac Fermions at mK Temperatures
3:06 PM–3:42 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Joseph Stroscio
(NIST)
Since the beginning of the last century new frontiers in physics
have
emerged when advances in instrumentation achieved lower experimental
operating temperatures. Notable examples include the discovery of
superconductivity and the integer and fractional quantum Hall
effects. New
experimental techniques are continually adapted in order to meet new
experimental challenges. A case in point is scanning tunneling
microscopy
(STM) which has seen a wealth of new measurements emerge as
cryogenic STM
instruments have been developed in the last two decades. In this
talk I
describe the design, development and performance of a scanning probe
microscopy facility operating at a base temperature of 10 mK in
magnetic
fields up to 15 T [1]. The microscope is cooled by a custom
designed, fully
ultra-high vacuum (UHV) compatible dilution refrigerator (DR) and
is capable
of in-situ tip and sample exchange. Sub-picometer stability at the
tip-sample junction is achieved through three independent vibration
isolation stages and careful design of the dilution refrigerator.
The system
can be connected to, or disconnected from, a network of
interconnected
auxiliary UHV chambers used for sample and probe tip preparation.
Current
measurements are focusing on Dirac fermions in graphene and in
topological
insulators. The history of the fractional quantum Hall states in
semiconductor heterostructures suggests that studying graphene at
lower
temperatures and higher magnetic fields may reveal new quantum
phases of
matter. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy of graphene at mK
temperatures
reveals the detailed structure of the degenerate Landau levels in
graphene,
resolving the full quartet of states corresponding to the lifting
of the
spin and valley dengeneracies [2]. When the Fermi level lies
inside the
four-fold Landau manifold, significant electron correlation
effects result
in enhanced valley splitting and spin splitting. New many-body
states are
observed at fractional filling factors of 7/2, 9/2, and 11/2.
\\[4pt]
[1] \textit{A 10 mK Scanning Probe Microscopy Facility}, Y. J.
Song, A. F. Otte, V. Shvarts, Z. Zhao, Y. Kuk, S. R.
Blankenship, A. Band, F. M. Hess, and J. A. Stroscio, Rev. Sci.
Instrum. (in
press).
\\[0pt]
[2] \textit{High Resolution Tunneling Spectroscopy of a Graphene
Quartet}, Y. Jae Song, A. F. Otte, Y. Kuk, Y. Hu, D. B. Torrance,
P. N. First,
W. A. de Heer, H. Min, S. Adam, M. D. Stiles, A. H. MacDonald,
and J. A.
Stroscio, Nature \textbf{467}, 185 (2010).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.D5.2