Left: The scanning quantum dot
micrograph of a PTCDA molecule reveals the negative partial charges at
the ends of the molecule as well as the positive partial charges in the
center. Center: Simulated electric potential above a PTCDA molecule with
molecular structure. Right: Schematic of charge distribution in the
PTCDA molecule.
Credit: Copyright Forschungszentrum Juelich
Using a single molecule as a sensor,
scientists in Jülich have successfully imaged electric potential fields
with unrivalled precision. The ultrahigh-resolution images provide
information on the distribution of charges in the electron shells of
single molecules and even atoms. The 3D technique is also contact-free.
The first results achieved using "scanning quantum dot microscopy" have
been published in the current issue of Physical Review Letters.
The related publication was chosen as the Editor's suggestion and
selected as a Viewpoint in the science portal Physics. The technique is
relevant for diverse scientific fields including investigations into
biomolecules and semiconductor materials.
"Our method is the first to image electric fields near the surface of
a sample quantitatively with atomic precision on the sub-nanometre
scale," says Dr. Ruslan Temirov from Forschungszentrum Jülich. Such
electric fields surround all nanostructures like an aura. Their
properties provide information, for instance, on the distribution of
charges in atoms or molecules.
For their measurements, the Jülich researchers used an atomic force
microscope. This functions a bit like a record player: a tip moves
across the sample and pieces together a complete image of the surface.
To image electric fields up until now, scientists have used the entire
front part of the scanning tip as a Kelvin probe. But the large size
difference between the tip and the sample causes resolution difficulties
-- if we were to imagine that a single atom was the same size as a head
of a pin, then the tip of the microscope would be as large as the
Empire State Building.
Single molecule as a sensor
In order to improve resolution and sensitivity, the scientists in
Jülich attached a single molecule as a quantum dot to the tip of the
microscope. Quantum dots are tiny structures, measuring no more than a
few nanometres across, which due to quantum confinement can only assume
certain, discrete states comparable to the energy level of a single
atom.
The molecule at the tip of the microscope functions like a beam
balance, which tilts to one side or the other. A shift in one direction
or the other corresponds to the presence or absence of an additional
electron, which either jumps from the tip to the molecule or does not.
The "molecular" balance does not compare weights but rather two electric
fields that act on the mobile electron of the molecular sensor: the
first is the field of a nanostructure being measured, and the second is a
field surrounding the tip of the microscope, which carries a voltage.
"The voltage at the tip is varied until equilibrium is achieved. If
we know what voltage has been applied, we can determine the field of the
sample at the position of the molecule," explains Dr. Christian Wagner,
a member of Temirov's Young Investigators group at Jülich's Peter
Grünberg Institute (PGI-3). "Because the whole molecular balance is so
small, comprising only 38 atoms, we can create a very sharp image of the
electric field of the sample. It's a bit like a camera with very small
pixels."
Universally applicable
A patent is pending for the method, which is particularly suitable
for measuring rough surfaces, for example those of semiconductor
structures for electronic devices or folded biomolecules. "In contrast
to many other forms of scanning probe microscopy, scanning quantum dot
microscopy can even work at a distance of several nanometres. In the
nanoworld, this is quite a considerable distance," says Christian
Wagner. Until now, the technique developed in Jülich has only been
applied in high vacuum and at low temperatures: essential prerequisites
to carefully attach the single molecule to the tip of the microscope.
"In principle, variations that would work at room temperature are
conceivable," believes the physicist. Other forms of quantum dots could
be used as a sensor in place of the molecule, such as those that can be
realized with semiconductor materials: one example would be quantum dots
made of nanocrystals like those already being used in fundamental
research.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
Forschungszentrum Juelich.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.