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Dive into the research topics where Marcus Liebmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcus Liebmann.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Intrinsic and extrinsic corrugation of monolayer graphene deposited on SiO 2

Viktor Geringer; Marcus Liebmann; Tim J. Echtermeyer; S Runte; M. Schmidt; R Rückamp; Max C Lemme; Markus Morgenstern

Using scanning tunneling microscopy in an ultrahigh vacuum and atomic force microscopy, we investigate the corrugation of graphene flakes deposited by exfoliation on a Si/SiO2 (300 nm) surface. While the corrugation on SiO2 is long range with a correlation length of about 25 nm, some of the graphene monolayers exhibit an additional corrugation with a preferential wavelength of about 15 nm. A detailed analysis shows that the long-range corrugation of the substrate is also visible on graphene, but with a reduced amplitude, leading to the conclusion that the graphene is partly freely suspended between hills of the substrate. Thus, the intrinsic rippling observed previously on artificially suspended graphene can exist as well, if graphene is deposited on SiO2.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2009

Three-dimensional imaging of short-range chemical forces with picometre resolution

B.J. Albers; Todd C. Schwendemann; Mehmet Z. Baykara; Nicolas Pilet; Marcus Liebmann; Eric I. Altman; Udo D. Schwarz

Chemical forces on surfaces have a central role in numerous scientific and technological fields, including catalysis, thin film growth and tribology. Many applications require knowledge of the strength of these forces as a function of position in three dimensions, but until now such information has only been available from theory. Here, we demonstrate an approach based on atomic force microscopy that can obtain this data, and we use this approach to image the three-dimensional surface force field of graphite. We show force maps with picometre and piconewton resolution that allow a detailed characterization of the interaction between the surface and the tip of the microscope in three dimensions. In these maps, the positions of all atoms are identified, and differences between atoms at inequivalent sites are quantified. The results suggest that the excellent lubrication properties of graphite may be due to a significant localization of the lateral forces.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Wave-function mapping of graphene quantum dots with soft confinement.

Dinesh Subramaniam; Christian Pauly; Marco Pratzer; Yan Li; Viktor Geringer; Thomas Michely; Carsten Busse; Markus Morgenstern; T. Mashoff; Riccardo Mazzarello; Florian Libisch; Marcus Liebmann; Joachim Burgdörfer; Rafael Reiter

Using low-temperature scanning tunneling spectroscopy, we map the local density of states of graphene quantum dots supported on Ir(111). Because of a band gap in the projected Ir band structure around the graphene K point, the electronic properties of the QDs are dominantly graphenelike. Indeed, we compare the results favorably with tight binding calculations on the honeycomb lattice based on parameters derived from density functional theory. We find that the interaction with the substrate near the edge of the island gradually opens a gap in the Dirac cone, which implies soft-wall confinement. Interestingly, this confinement results in highly symmetric wave functions. Further influences of the substrate are given by the known moiré potential and a 10% penetration of an Ir surface resonance into the graphene layer.


Nano Letters | 2010

Bistability and Oscillatory Motion of Natural Nanomembranes Appearing within Monolayer Graphene on Silicon Dioxide

T. Mashoff; Marco Pratzer; Viktor Geringer; Tim J. Echtermeyer; Max C. Lemme; Marcus Liebmann; Markus Morgenstern

The truly two-dimensional material graphene is an ideal candidate for nanoelectromechanics due to its large strength and mobility. Here we show that graphene flakes provide natural nanomembranes of diameter down to 3 nm within its intrinsic rippling. The membranes can be lifted either reversibly or hysteretically by the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope. The clamped-membrane model including van-der-Waals and dielectric forces explains the results quantitatively. AC-fields oscillate the membranes, which might lead to a completely novel approach to controlled quantized oscillations or single atom mass detection.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2000

Design and performance of a versatile, cost-effective microwave electron cyclotron resonance plasma source for surface and thin film processing

R. Anton; Th. Wiegner; W. Naumann; Marcus Liebmann; Chr. Klein; Chr. Bradley

A plasma source has been developed, which makes use of electron cyclotron microwave resonance conditions without cost-intensive tuning or other active elements. A magnetron typical of domestic microwave ovens is coupled to a cylindrical resonator of fixed dimensions. A high density plasma is maintained with permanent magnets. Sources have been designed for both high vacuum and ultrahigh vacuum environments. In the latter, microwaves are conducted by a coaxial feedthrough from the resonator to a ceramic plasma cup inside the vacuum chamber. This permits shorter working distances, resulting in higher beam densities at the sample. Ions are extracted from the plasma by grid assemblies. Beam energies are in the range from 30 to 2000 eV, with densities from a few μA/cm2 up to 10 mA/cm2, respectively. Predominantly neutral species are emitted using a specially designed, ceramic grid. Operating with O2 gas, a flux of neutral monomers of 2×1016/cm2 s has been measured by the oxidation of Ag films. The performance ...


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

Combined low-temperature scanning tunneling/atomic force microscope for atomic resolution imaging and site-specific force spectroscopy.

B.J. Albers; Marcus Liebmann; Todd C. Schwendemann; Mehmet Z. Baykara; Markus Heyde; Miquel Salmeron; Eric I. Altman; Udo D. Schwarz

We present the design and first results of a low-temperature, ultrahigh vacuum scanning probe microscope enabling atomic resolution imaging in both scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and noncontact atomic force microscopy (NC-AFM) modes. A tuning-fork-based sensor provides flexibility in selecting probe tip materials, which can be either metallic or nonmetallic. When choosing a conducting tip and sample, simultaneous STM/NC-AFM data acquisition is possible. Noticeable characteristics that distinguish this setup from similar systems providing simultaneous STM/NC-AFM capabilities are its combination of relative compactness (on-top bath cryostat needs no pit), in situ exchange of tip and sample at low temperatures, short turnaround times, modest helium consumption, and unrestricted access from dedicated flanges. The latter permits not only the optical surveillance of the tip during approach but also the direct deposition of molecules or atoms on either tip or sample while they remain cold. Atomic corrugations as low as 1 pm could successfully be resolved. In addition, lateral drifts rates of below 15 pm/h allow long-term data acquisition series and the recording of site-specific spectroscopy maps. Results obtained on Cu(111) and graphite illustrate the microscopes performance.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Giant Rashba‐Type Spin Splitting in Ferroelectric GeTe(111)

Marcus Liebmann; Christian Rinaldi; Domenico Di Sante; Jens Kellner; Christian Pauly; Rui Ning Wang; Jos E. Boschker; Alessandro Giussani; Stefano Bertoli; Matteo Cantoni; Lorenzo Baldrati; Marco Asa; I. Vobornik; G. Panaccione; D. Marchenko; J. Sánchez-Barriga; O. Rader; Raffaella Calarco; Silvia Picozzi; Riccardo Bertacco; Markus Morgenstern

Photoelectron spectroscopy in combination with piezoforce microscopy reveals that the helicity of Rashba bands is coupled to the nonvolatile ferroelectric polarization of GeTe(111). A novel surface Rashba band is found and fingerprints of a bulk Rashba band are identified by comparison with density functional theory calculations.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Electrical transport and low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy of microsoldered graphene

Viktor Geringer; Dinesh Subramaniam; A. K. Michel; B. Szafranek; D. Schall; Alexander Georgi; T. Mashoff; Daniel Neumaier; Marcus Liebmann; Markus Morgenstern

Using the recently developed technique of microsoldering, we perform systematic transport studies of the influence of polymethylmethacrylate on graphene revealing a doping effect with a n-type dopant density Δn of up to Δn=3.8×1012 cm−2 but negligible influence on mobility and hysteresis. Moreover, we show that microsoldered graphene is free of contamination and exhibits very similar intrinsic rippling as found for lithographically contacted flakes. Characterizing the microsoldered sample by scanning tunneling spectroscopy, we demonstrate a current induced closing of the phonon gap and a B-field induced double peak attributed to the 0 Landau level.


Physical Review B | 2012

Probing two topological surface bands of Sb2Te3by spin-polarized photoemission spectroscopy

Christian Pauly; Gustav Bihlmayer; Marcus Liebmann; M. Grob; A. Georgi; D. Subramaniam; M. R. Scholz; J. Sánchez-Barriga; A. Varykhalov; Stefan Blügel; O. Rader; Markus Morgenstern

Using high resolution spin- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we map the electronic structure and spin texture of the surface states of the topological insulator Sb2Te3. In combination with density functional calculations (DFT), we directly show that Sb2Te3 exhibits a partially occupied, single spin-Dirac cone around the Fermi energy, which is topologically protected. DFT obtains a spin polarization of the occupied Dirac cone states of 80-90%, which is in reasonable agreement with the experimental data after careful background subtraction. Furthermore, we observe a strongly spin-orbit split surface band at lower energy. This state is found at 0.8eV below the Fermi level at the gamma-point, disperses upwards, and disappears at about 0.4eV below the Fermi level into two different bulk bands. Along the gamma-K direction, the band is located within a spin-orbit gap. According to an argument given by Pendry and Gurman in 1975, such a gap must contain a surface state, if it is located away from the high symmetry points of the Brillouin zone. Thus, the novel spin-split state is protected by symmetry, too.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2002

A low-temperature ultrahigh vacuum scanning force microscope with a split-coil magnet

Marcus Liebmann; A. Schwarz; S. M. Langkat; R. Wiesendanger

We present the design of a scanning force microscope, which is optimized for magnetic force microscopy experiments. It can be operated at temperatures down to 5.2 K, in ultrahigh vacuum, and in magnetic fields of up to 5 T. Cooling is provided by a liquid helium bath cryostat, and the magnetic field is generated by a superconducting split-coil magnet. The design allows easy access from the side through a shutter system for fast in situ tip and sample exchange, while the microscope stays at temperatures below 25 K. The microscope itself features an all-fiber interferometric detection system, a 7.5×7.5 μm2 scan area at 5.2 K, and an xy table. The topographic resolution is demonstrated by imaging monoatomic steps on a nickel oxide surface, while magnetic contrast is shown on cobalt platinum multilayers and on a manganite perovskite film.

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Z. G. Khim

Seoul National University

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