“…Sometimes the resulting oscillations of the differential conductance dI/dU as a function of U are referred to as the Gundlach oscillations. The field emission resonances attributed with the resonant tunnelling through the quasistationary modified IPS were experimentally studied for the following atomically flat surfaces: Au(110) [22], Ni(100) [23], surface of diamond C(100) 2 × 1 [24], Cu(100) [25], Mo(110) [26], Ag(100) and Fe(110) [27], Fe(110) [28], graphene [29], InAs(111) [30], topological semimetal Sb(111) [31]; and for nanostructured objects on top of flat surfaces: FeO islands on Pt(111) [32], molecules of benzene on Cu(111) [33], NaCl islands on Ag(100) [34,35], Ag islands on Au(111), Cu(111) and Co islands on Cu(111) [36], Na islands on Cu(111) [37], Pb islands on Cu(111) and Ag(111) [38,39] with theoretical interpretation [40], Co islands on Au(111) [41], surface defects like stacking-fault tetrahedrons on Ag(111) [42], carbon nanotubes on Au(111) [43], graphene islands on Ir(111) [44], and others. In particular, the analysis of the spectra of the IPS resonances allows to estimation the local work function, e.g.…”