Controlling The Electric Charge Of Gold Nanoplatelets On An Insulator By Field Emission Nc-Afm

APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS(2018)

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Abstract
Charging of 2D Au nanoplatelets deposited on an insulating SiO2 substrate to or from the tip of a non-contact atomic force microscope (nc-AFM) is demonstrated. Charge transfer is controlled by monitoring the resonance frequency shift Delta f(V) during the bias voltage ramp V applied to the tip-back electrode junction. The onset of charge transfer is revealed by a transition from a capacitive parabolic behavior to a constant Delta f(V) region for both polarities. An analytical model, based on charging by electron field emission, shows that the field-emitted current saturates shortly after the onset of the charging, due to the limiting effect of the charge-induced rise of the Au platelet potential. The value of this current plateau depends only on the rate of the bias voltage ramp and on the value of the platelet/SiO2/back electrode capacitance. This analysis is confirmed by numerical simulations based on a virtual nc-AFM model that faithfully matches the experimental data. Our charging protocol could be used to tune the potential of the platelets at the single charge level. Published by AIP Publishing.
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Key words
gold nanoplatelets,insulator,electric charge,emission,nc-afm
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