A local view of the Kondo
effect: Scanning tunneling
spectroscopy
WOLF-DIETER SCHNEIDER
Institut de Physique de la Matière Condensée,
Université de Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne,
Switzerland
E-mail: wschneid@ipmc.unil.ch
Abstract:
The fascinating many-body physics involved in the interaction
of a single magnetic impurity with the conduction electrons of its nonmagnetic metallic
host is reflected in unconventional phenomena in magnetism, transport properties and the
specific heat. Characteristic low-energy excitations, termed the Kondo resonance, are
generally believed to be responsible for this striking behaviour. However, in spite of an
intense research for over more than 30 years, a direct spectroscopic observation of the
Kondo resonance on individual magnetic adatoms withstood experimental efforts hitherto.
The development of low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopes (STM) operating under
ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) conditions has provided new opportunities for investigating locally
the electronic structure at surfaces. At low temperatures, due to the reduced broadening
of the Fermi level of the STM tip and the sample, rather high energy resolution ( 1 meV) in scanning tunneling spectroscopy (STS) is achievable. Moreover, the
absence of diffusion together with the spatial resolution of the STM enables detailed
studies of electronic states on and near single adsorbed atoms and other nanoscale
structures. Recently, for the first time, two such STS/STM experiments spatially resolved
the electronic properties of individual magnetic adatoms displaying the Kondo effect. In
particular, the observed Fano lineshape of the Kondo resonance reveals unambiguously the
details of the quantum mechanical interference between the localized orbital and the
conduction electrons on an atomic length scale [1, 2]. This achievement of the detection
of individual magnetic atoms with atomic resolution opens new perspectives for probing
magnetic nanostructures.
keywords : Kondo effect; Kondo resonance; Fano resonance;
individual magnetic atoms; magnetic nanostructures; scanning tunneling spectroscopy;
scanning tunneling microscopy.
pacs : 72.10; 72.15; 75.20; 71.27; 61.16; 73.20
|