Continuous speaker-independent Putonghua dictation system
C.J. Chen, R.A. Gopinath, et al.
ICSP 1996
In this review article, scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) is presented in a chemical perspective. The typical distance from the nucleus of the apex atom of the tip to the top-layer nuclei of the sample is 4-6 Å, where a strong attractive atomic force, i.e., a partial covalent bond, arises between the tip and the sample. The origin of the covalent bond is the back-and- forth transfer of electrons between two atoms, which Pauling has called resonance. While a bias voltage is applied between them, a net electron current in a specific direction arises. This tunneling current is a result of the overlap of the tip electronic state and the sample electronic state, same as the chemical bond. The imaging process of STM can be considered as a sequence of local bond forming and bond rupturing. A quantitative understanding of the STM imaging mechanism can be achieved in such a chemical perspective. A natural consequence of this perspective is that the tip, partially bonded with the sample, can play an active role in local chemical reactions. The tip can either involve directly in a chemical reaction with the atoms on the sample surface or induce local chemical reactions on the sample surface as a local catalyst.
C.J. Chen, R.A. Gopinath, et al.
ICSP 1996
C.J. Chen, H. Li, et al.
ICASSP 2001
C.J. Chen
Journal of Physics Condensed Matter
C.J. Chen, R.A. Gopinath, et al.
INTERSPEECH - Eurospeech 1997