Abstract
Regulating the state of the solid-liquid interface by means of electric fields is a powerful tool to control
electrochemistry. In scanning probe systems, this can be confined closely to a scanning (nano)electrode by
means of fast potential pulses, providing a way to probe the interface and control electrochemical reactions
locally, as has been demonstrated in nanoscale electrochemical etching. For this purpose, it is important to
know the spatial extent of the interaction between pulses applied to the tip, and the substrate. In this paper
we use a framework of diffuse layer charging to describe the localization of electrical double layer charging
in response to a potential pulse at the probe. Our findings are in good agreement to literature values
obtained in electrochemical etching. We show that the pulse can be much more localized by limiting the
diffusivity of the ions present in solution, by confined electrodeposition of cobalt in a dimethyl sulfoxide
solution, using an electrochemical scanning tunneling microscope. Finally, we demonstrate the deposition
of cobalt nanostructures (<100 nm) using this method. The presented framework therefore provides a
general route for predicting and controlling the time-dependent region of interaction between an
electrochemical scanning probe and the surface.
Supplementary materials
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