Dipanjan Gope, Albert E. Ruehli, et al.
IEEE T-MTT
At a corrugated metal or semiconductor surface, incident waves are split into beams reflected by the surface and exponentially damped waves penetrating the vacuum region. A probing tip approaching this surface from the vacuum side collects these damped waves, resulting in a tunneling current flow between the surface and the tip. By relying on arguments like those used to derive resolution criteria for optical instruments, a similar formula can be found for free-electron-like metals. For a surface with a weak sinusoidal corrugation with amplitude hs 2, the amplitude Δd 2 of the observed corrugation of the equicurrent surface decreases as Δ d hs= exp[-π2( φ2m h2)- 1 2 (d+rt a2], where φ=U-EF is the averaged lo (work function), U the potential, EF the Fermi energy, a the corrugation period, d the distance between the surface and tip. and rt the tip radius. The validity of this formula is confirmed by numerical computations of tunneling through a corrugated barrier. © 1984.
Dipanjan Gope, Albert E. Ruehli, et al.
IEEE T-MTT
R.J. Gambino, N.R. Stemple, et al.
Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids
Arvind Kumar, Jeffrey J. Welser, et al.
MRS Spring 2000
Frank R. Libsch, Takatoshi Tsujimura
Active Matrix Liquid Crystal Displays Technology and Applications 1997