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Determining the temperature of a millikelvin scanning tunnelling microscope junction

Taner Esat, Xiaosheng Yang, Farhad Mustafayev, Helmut Soltner, F. Stefan Tautz, Ruslan Temirov

2023Communications Physics10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Cooling the junction of a scanning tunneling microscope to millikelvin temperatures is fundamental for high-resolution scanning tunneling spectroscopy. However, accurately determining the junction temperature has proven elusive, due to the microscopic dimension of the junction and its continuous energy exchange with the surrounding environment. Here, we employ a millikelvin scanning tunnelling microscope cooled by an adiabatic demagnetization refrigerator. Using normal-metal and superconducting tips, we perform scanning tunnelling spectroscopy on an atomically clean surface of Al(100) in a superconducting state. By varying the refrigerator temperatures between 30 mK and 1.2 K, we show that the temperature of the junction is decoupled from the temperature of the surrounding environment. To corroborate our findings, we simulate the scanning tunnelling spectroscopy data with P ( E ) theory and determine that the junction has a temperature of 77 mK, despite its environment being at 1.5 K.

Topics & Concepts

Quantum tunnellingScanning tunneling microscopeScanning tunneling spectroscopyMicroscopeSpectroscopyAdiabatic processMaterials scienceSuperconductivityElectrochemical scanning tunneling microscopeCondensed matter physicsRefrigerator carScanning probe microscopyScanning Hall probe microscopeTunnel junctionOptoelectronicsScanning electron microscopeOpticsNanotechnologyPhysicsConventional transmission electron microscopeThermodynamicsScanning transmission electron microscopyQuantum mechanicsComposite materialPhysics of Superconductivity and MagnetismQuantum and electron transport phenomenaTopological Materials and Phenomena