Electrochimica Acta, Vol.50, No.15, 3077-3083, 2005
In situ scanning probe spectroscopy at nanoscale solid/liquid interfaces
Electrochemistry provides unique features for the preparation of low-dimensional structures, but in situ spectroscopy with atomic/molecular resolution at such structures is at present not well established yet. This paper shows that in situ scanning probe spectroscopy at solid/liquid interfaces can be utilized to study electronic properties at nanoscale, if appropriate conditions are applied. Tunneling spectroscopy provides information about tunneling barrier heights and electronic states in the tunneling gap, as shown on Au(111) substrates, contact spectroscopy allows for transport measurements at single nanostructures, as shown at Au/n-Si(111) nanodiodes. The influence of the electrolytic environment on spectroscopic investigations is not a principal limitation, but offers additional degrees of freedom, which allow, for example, spectroscopic studies of potential dependent surface phenomena at solid/liquid interfaces. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:scanning probe spectroscopy (SPS);distance tunneling spectroscopy (DTS);voltage tunneling spectroscopy (VTS);voltage contact spectroscopy (VCS)