Structure and local charging of electromigrated Au nanocontacts
Daniel Arnold, Michael Marz, Sebastian Schneider, Regina, Hoffmann-Vogel

TL;DR
This study investigates the structure and electronic properties of electromigrated gold nanocontacts, revealing details about their formation, local charging, and work function variations, which are crucial for molecular contact applications.
Contribution
It introduces a controlled electromigration method with cyclic current application to create nanogaps and analyzes the resulting structural and electronic features of Au nanocontacts.
Findings
Formation of a 1.5 μm-wide slit with asymmetric extensions.
Observation of local work function differences of 70 mV before electromigration.
Detection of a 3.2 V work function difference due to local charging.
Abstract
We study the structure and the electronic properties of Au nanocontacts created by controlled electromigration of thin film devices, a method frequently used to contact molecules. In contrast to electromigration testing, a current is applied in a cyclic fashion and during each cycle the resistance increase of the metal upon heating is used to avoid thermal runaway. In this way, nanometer sized-gaps are obtained. The thin film devices with an optimized structure at the origin of the electromigration process are made by shadow evaporation without contamination by organic materials. Defining rounded edges and a thinner area in the center of the device allow to pre-determine the location where the electromigration takes place. Scanning force microscopy images of the pristine Au film and electromigrated contact show its grainy structure. Through electromigration, a m-wide slit is…
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