Title
Controlled nanofabrication of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite with the scanning tunneling microscope
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-1992
Abstract
The formation and selective etching of recessed features of various shapes in highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) in air were accomplished by use of the scanning tunneling microscope with positive substrate bias voltages of +1500 to +3000 mV and tunneling currents of less than 2 nA. Etching of the surface was restricted to the scan area and only occurred with positive biases, which suggests that etching occurs by an electrochemical mode of oxidation of the graphite under the tip. Lines with widths as small as 10 nm and squares 25 × 25 nm could be formed with monolayer depth (0.34 nm) in the HOPG by varying the time that the tip was rastered over a designated area. © 1992 American Chemical Society.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Journal of Physical Chemistry
First Page
10089
Last Page
10092
Recommended Citation
McCarley, R., Hendricks, S., & Bard, A. (1992). Controlled nanofabrication of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite with the scanning tunneling microscope. Journal of Physical Chemistry, 96 (25), 10089-10092. https://doi.org/10.1021/j100204a002