Thomas H. Baum, Carl E. Larson, et al.
Journal of Organometallic Chemistry
The novel technique of low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy is used to study conventional and high-Tc superconductors (spatial identification and distribution of the superconducting gap, vortex movement, etc.), but also custom-designed materials which are unstable at room temperature, e.g. xenon layers and size-selected clusters, or species whose rotational or vibrational movements have to be frozen in to achieve atomic resolution. We present the specific design and advantages of our low-temperature ultra-high vacuum scanning tunneling microscope along with recent results on the internal structure of C60 fullerene molecules and their photon emitting properties. © 1994.
Thomas H. Baum, Carl E. Larson, et al.
Journal of Organometallic Chemistry
Eloisa Bentivegna
Big Data 2022
Sang-Min Park, Mark P. Stoykovich, et al.
Advanced Materials
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Journal of Physics Condensed Matter