Cryogenic current-in-plane tunneling apparatus

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Abstract

We have designed and fabricated a cryogenic variable-temperature current-in-plane tunneling apparatus to measure the magnetoresistive properties of unpatterned magnetic tunnel junction wafers as a function of temperature. The wafer is mounted on the cold finger of a liquid helium continuous flow cryostat. The temperature can be continuously varied between 7 and 330 K. We describe the design and fabrication of the micromachined silicon probe head that comprises a comb of 20 measuring and 4 leveling probes. The measuring probes are typically 0.7 μm wide and 1.2 μm thick, with lengths of 10, 7, and 4 μm, and a pitch that varies from 1.5 to 30 μm. The leveling probes are used in conjunction with a tilt stage to adjust the parallelism between the comb and the sample wafer during the approach of the probe head. The probe head is mounted on a nonmagnetic x-y stage, which can access a 22×22mm2 area with a repeatability of ∼1 μm. The first measurements taken at room and cryogenic temperatures are shown. © 2008 American Institute of Physics.

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Weiss, N., Drechsler, U., Despont, M., & Parkin, S. S. P. (2008). Cryogenic current-in-plane tunneling apparatus. Review of Scientific Instruments, 79(12). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2972167

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