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In recent years, self-assembled semiconductor nanowires have been successfully used as ultra-sensitive cantilevers in a number of unique scanning probe microscopy (SPM) settings. We describe the fabrication of ultra-low dissipation patterned silicon nanowire (SiNW) arrays optimized for scanning probe applications. Our fabrication process produces, with high yield, ultra-high aspect ratio vertical SiNWs that exhibit exceptional force sensitivity. The highest sensitivity SiNWs have thermomechanical-noise limited force sensitivity of $9.7pm0.4~text{aN}/sqrt{text{Hz}}$ at room temperature and $500pm20~text{zN}/sqrt{text{Hz}}$ at 4 K. To facilitate their use in SPM, the SiNWs are patterned within $7~mutext{m}$ from the edge of the substrate, allowing convenient optical access for displacement detection.
Spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy (SP-STM) measures tunnel magnetoresistance (TMR) with atomic resolution. While various methods for achieving SP probes have been developed, each is limited with respect to fabrication, performance, and all
We report on state-of-the-art scanning probe microscopy measurements performed in a pulse tube based top-loading closed-cycle cryostat with a base temperature of 4 K and a 9 T magnet. We decoupled the sample space from the mechanical and acoustic noi
With recent advances in scanning probe microscopy (SPM), it is now routine to determine the atomic structure of surfaces and molecules while quantifying the local tip-sample interaction potentials. Such quantitative experiments are based on the accur
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) is an analytical surface characterization tool which can reveal a samples topography with high spatial resolution while simultaneously probing tip-sample interactions. Local measurement of chemical properties with high-r
We report the development of a scanning force microscope based on an ultra-sensitive silicon nitride membrane transducer. Our development is made possible by inverting the standard microscope geometry - in our instrument, the substrate is vibrating a