Johnson-noise-limited cancellation-free microwave impedance microscopy with monolithic silicon cantilever probes

Microwave impedance microscopy (MIM) is an emerging scanning probe technique for nanoscale complex permittivity mapping and has made significant impacts in diverse fields. To date, the most significant hurdles that limit its widespread use are the requirements of specialized microwave probes and hig...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-06, Vol.15 (1), p.5043-8, Article 5043
Hauptverfasser: Shan, Jun-Yi, Morrison, Nathaniel, Chen, Su-Di, Wang, Feng, Ma, Eric Y.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Microwave impedance microscopy (MIM) is an emerging scanning probe technique for nanoscale complex permittivity mapping and has made significant impacts in diverse fields. To date, the most significant hurdles that limit its widespread use are the requirements of specialized microwave probes and high-precision cancellation circuits. Here, we show that forgoing both elements not only is feasible but also enhances performance. Using monolithic silicon cantilever probes and a cancellation-free architecture, we demonstrate Johnson-noise-limited, drift-free MIM operation with 15 nm spatial resolution, minimal topography crosstalk, and an unprecedented sensitivity of 0.26 zF/ √ Hz. We accomplish this by taking advantage of the high mechanical resonant frequency and spatial resolution of silicon probes, the inherent common-mode phase noise rejection of self-referenced homodyne detection, and the exceptional stability of the streamlined architecture. Our approach makes MIM drastically more accessible and paves the way for advanced operation modes as well as integration with complementary techniques. The authors introduce a new approach to microwave impedance microscopy, eliminating once-indispensable specialized probes and cancellation circuits. Using monolithic silicon probes and a streamlined architecture, they achieve 0.26 zF/ √ Hz sensitivity and 15 nm resolution with drift-free operation.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-49405-8