Abstract

Low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy (STM/S) help to better understand the fundamental physics of condensed matter. We present an ultracompact STM within a Φ 10 piezo tube in a 20T superconducting magnet. The carefully cut piezo tube contains the STM's coarse-positioning assembly. Loading an STM tip-sample mechanical loop into the piezo tube with special cut openings enables an ultracompact pencil-size dimension down to Φ 10mm, in which fine-machined nonmagnetic parts are assembled to enable slide-stick motion and xyz-scanning procedures. The small size leads to a higher resonant frequency, a typical feature of a rigid STM instrument, increasing its vibration immunity. Scanning by moving the sample while keeping the tip stationary improves the stability of the tip-sample junction compared to moving the tip. Taking advantage of its high-field compatibility and rigid design, our STM captures the atomically resolved topography of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) at 1.5K and in magnetic fields up to 17T. The topography of graphene lattice and graphite is simultaneously recorded on an atomic terrace of HOPG, unveiling a modified local charge density at a surface defect. The superconducting energy gaps of layered type-II superconductors NbSe2 and PdBi2 are well resolved through dI/dV tunneling spectra at sub-2K. Our unique STM is highly suitable for potential STM/S applications in world-class high-field facilities where the strong magnetic field can exceed 30T.

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