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Recently, a single atom transistor was deterministically fabricated using phosphorus in Si by H-desorption lithography with a scanning tunneling microscope (STM). This milestone in precision, achieved by operating the STM in the conventional tunneling mode, typically utilizes very slow ($sim!10^2~mathrm{nm^2/s}$) patterning speeds. By contrast, using the STM in a high voltage ($>10~mathrm{V}$) field emission mode, patterning speeds can be increased by orders of magnitude to $gtrsim!10^4~mathrm{nm^2/s}$. We show that the rapid patterning negligibly affects the functionality of relatively large micron-sized features, which act as contacting pads on these devices. For nanoscale structures, we show that the resulting transport is consistent with the donor incorporation chemistry enhancing the device definition to a scale of $10~mathrm{nm}$ even though the pattering spot size is $40~mathrm{nm}$.
Electrically-detected magnetic resonance (EDMR) provides a highly sensitive method for reading out the state of donor spins in silicon. The technique relies on a spin-dependent recombination (SDR) process involving dopant spins that are coupled to in
InSb nanowire arrays with different geometrical parameters, diameter and pitch, are fabricated by top-down etching process on Si(100) substrates. Field emission properties of InSb nanowires are investigated by using a nano-manipulated tungsten probe-
By creating a sharp and dense dopant profile of phosphorus atoms buried within a silicon host, a two-dimensional electron gas is formed within the dopant region. Quantum confinement effects induced by reducing the thickness of the dopant layer, from
We present a systematic study of the influence of the encapsulation temperature on dopant confinement and electrical properties of Ge:P delta-doped layers. For increasing growth temperature we observe an enhancement of the electrical properties accom
We have developed a novel method for crystalline hydrogenation of graphene on the nanoscale. Molecular hydrogen was physisorbed at 5 K onto pristine graphene islands grown on Cu(111) in ultrahigh vacuum. Field emission local to the tip of a scanning