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This volume contains the proceedin,r. of the NATO Advanced Study
Institute on "Forces in Scanning Probe Methods which was
CG-sponsered and organized by the "Forum fUr N anowissenschaften".
The conference was held in Schluchsee in the south- em Black Forest
(Germany) from March 7-18, 1994. 30 invited lecturers giving tuto-
rial talks of historical and recent research activities and about
100 contributed, oral and poster presentations from 130 people
participating, created a very active and lestimulating, lively
atmosphere. The inventions of scanning tunneling microscopy, atomic
force microscopy and near field optical microsocopy opened a new
field of research, called scanning probe meth- ods (SPM). During
the last decade, the quality of image acquisition made tremendous
progress due to advanced data acquisition systems, low noise
electronics and suitable mechan- ical and micromechanical
constructions. However, a lot of fundamental, unsolved questions
about the interaction between probing tip and sample remain. This
vol- ume contains 60 contributions dedicated to these problems.
Most of the articles are review articles presenting. condensed and
relevant information in a way suitable for both students and
specialists. Topics that are covered are instrumental aspects, de-
signs of force microscopes in various environments, such as ambient
pressure, low temperature, ultrahip vacuum and liquids. An
important part of the workshop was dedicated to theory, Including
all initio calculations and molecular dynamics simula- tions.
Mechanical properties, such as adhesion, friction and wear, on the
micrometer and nanometer scale were also treated intensively.
This volume contains the proceedin,r. of the NATO Advanced Study
Institute on "Forces in Scanning Probe Methods which was
CG-sponsered and organized by the "Forum fUr N anowissenschaften".
The conference was held in Schluchsee in the south- em Black Forest
(Germany) from March 7-18, 1994. 30 invited lecturers giving tuto-
rial talks of historical and recent research activities and about
100 contributed, oral and poster presentations from 130 people
participating, created a very active and lestimulating, lively
atmosphere. The inventions of scanning tunneling microscopy, atomic
force microscopy and near field optical microsocopy opened a new
field of research, called scanning probe meth- ods (SPM). During
the last decade, the quality of image acquisition made tremendous
progress due to advanced data acquisition systems, low noise
electronics and suitable mechan- ical and micromechanical
constructions. However, a lot of fundamental, unsolved questions
about the interaction between probing tip and sample remain. This
vol- ume contains 60 contributions dedicated to these problems.
Most of the articles are review articles presenting. condensed and
relevant information in a way suitable for both students and
specialists. Topics that are covered are instrumental aspects, de-
signs of force microscopes in various environments, such as ambient
pressure, low temperature, ultrahip vacuum and liquids. An
important part of the workshop was dedicated to theory, Including
all initio calculations and molecular dynamics simula- tions.
Mechanical properties, such as adhesion, friction and wear, on the
micrometer and nanometer scale were also treated intensively.
Scanning Tunneling Microscopy I provides a unique introduction to a
novel and fascinating technique that produces beautiful images of
nature on an atomic scale. It is the first of three volumes that
together offer a comprehensive treatment of scanning tunneling
microscopy, its diverse applications, and its theoretical
treatment. In this volume the reader will find a detailed
description of the technique itself and of its applications to
metals, semiconductors, layered materials, adsorbed molecules and
superconductors. In addition to the many representative results
reviewed, extensive references to original work will help to make
accessible the vast body of knowledge already accumulated in this
field.
Since the first edition of "Scanning 'funneling Microscopy I" has
been pub lished, considerable progress has been made in the
application of STM to the various classes of materials treated in
this volume, most notably in the field of adsorbates and molecular
systems. An update of the most recent develop ments will be given
in an additional Chapter 9. The editors would like to thank all the
contributors who have supplied up dating material, and those who
have provided us with suggestions for further improvements. We also
thank Springer-Verlag for the decision to publish this second
edition in paperback, thereby making this book affordable for an
even wider circle of readers. Hamburg, July 1994 R. Wiesendanger
Preface to the First Edition Since its invention in 1981 by G.
Binnig, H. Rohrer and coworkers at the IBM Zurich Research
Laboratory, scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) has devel oped into
an invaluable surface analytical technique allowing the
investigation of real-space surface structures at the atomic level.
The conceptual simplicity of the STM technique is startling:
bringing a sharp needle to within a few Angstroms of the surface of
a conducting sample and using the tunneling cur rent, which flows
on application of a bias voltage, to sense the atomic and elec
tronic surface structure with atomic resolution Prior to 1981
considerable scepticism existed as to the practicability of this
approach."
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