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Nanoscale Processes on Insulating Surfaces cover

Ionic crystals are among the simplest structures in nature. They can be easily cleaved in air and in vacuum, and the resulting surfaces are atomically flat on areas hundreds of nanometers wide. With the development of scanning probe microscopy, these surfaces have become an ideal “playground” to investigate several phenomena occurring on the nanometer scale. This book focuses on the fundamental studies of atomically resolved imaging, nanopatterning, metal deposition, molecular self-assembling and nanotribological processes occurring on ionic crystal surfaces. Here, a significant variety of structures are created by nanolithography, annealing and irradiation by electrons, ions or photons, and are used to confine metal particles and organic molecules or to improve our basic understanding of friction and wear on the atomic scale. Metal oxides with wide band gap are also discussed. Altogether, the results obtained so far will have an undoubted impact on the future development of nanoelectronics and nanomechanics.

Sample Chapter(s)
Chapter 1: Crystal Structures of Insulating Surfaces (802 KB)


Contents:
  • Crystal Structures of Insulating Surfaces
  • Preparation Techniques of Insulating Surfaces
  • Scanning Probe Microscopy in Ultra High Vacuum
  • Scanning Probe Microscopy on Bulk Insulating Surfaces
  • Scanning Probe Micrscopy on thin Insulating Films
  • Interaction of Ions, Electrons and Photons with Halide Surfaces
  • Surface Patterning with Electrons and Photons
  • Surface Patterning with Ions
  • Metal Deposition on Insulating Surfaces
  • Organic Molecules on Insulating Surfaces
  • Scanning Probe Spectroscopy on Insulating Surfaces
  • Nanotribology on Insulating Surfaces
  • Nanomanipulation on Insulating Surfaces

Readership: Physicists, chemists and materials scientists.