10 research outputs found

    Deformation and fracture of crystalline tungsten and fabrication of composite STM probes

    No full text
    Fracturing microscale constrictions in metallic wires, such as tungsten, platinum, or platinum-iridium, is a common fabrication method used to produce atomically sharp tips for scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), field-emission microscopy and field ion microscopy. Typically, a commercial polycrystalline drawn wire is locally thinned and then fractured by means of a dislocation slip inside the constriction. We examine a special case where a dislocation-free microscale constriction is created and fractured in a single crystal tungsten rod with a long side parallel to the [100] direction. In the absence of dislocations, vacancies become the main defects in the constriction which breaks under the tensile stress of approximately 10 GPa, which is close to the theoretical fracture strength for an ideal monocrystalline tungsten. We propose that the vacancies are removed early in the tensile test by means of deformation annealing, creating a defect-free tungsten constriction which cleaves along the W(100) plane. This approach enables fabrication of new composite STM probes which demonstrate excellent stability, atomic resolution and magnetic contrast that cannot be attained using conventional methods

    Sites and Mechanisms of Action of Antipsychotic Drugs as Revealed by Immediate-Early Gene Expression

    No full text

    The Neuropathology of Huntington’s Disease

    No full text
    corecore