223,755 research outputs found
Probing ion transport at the nanoscale: Time-domain electrostatic force spectroscopy on glassy electrolytes
We have carried out time--domain electrostatic force spectroscopy on two
different ion conducting glasses using an atomic force microscope. We compare
the electrostatic force spectroscopic data obtained at different temperatures
with macroscopic electrical data of the glasses. The overall consistency of the
data shows that electrostatic force spectroscopy is capable of probing the ion
dynamics and transport in nanoscopic subvolumes of the samples.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Imaging spectroscopy with the atomic force microscope
Force curve imaging spectroscopy involves acquiring a force-distance curve at each pixel of an atomic force microscope image. Processing of the resulting data yields images of sample hardness and tip-sample adhesion. These images resemble Z modulation images and the sum of forward and reverse friction images, respectively, and like them exhibit a number of potentially misleading contrast mechanisms. In particular, XY tip motion has a pronounced effect on hardness images and the meniscus force on adhesion images
Interaction imaging with amplitude-dependence force spectroscopy
Knowledge of surface forces is the key to understanding a large number of
processes in fields ranging from physics to material science and biology. The
most common method to study surfaces is dynamic atomic force microscopy (AFM).
Dynamic AFM has been enormously successful in imaging surface topography, even
to atomic resolution, but the force between the AFM tip and the surface remains
unknown during imaging. Here, we present a new approach that combines high
accuracy force measurements and high resolution scanning. The method, called
amplitude-dependence force spectroscopy (ADFS) is based on the
amplitude-dependence of the cantilever's response near resonance and allows for
separate determination of both conservative and dissipative tip-surface
interactions. We use ADFS to quantitatively study and map the nano-mechanical
interaction between the AFM tip and heterogeneous polymer surfaces. ADFS is
compatible with commercial atomic force microscopes and we anticipate its
wide-spread use in taking AFM toward quantitative microscopy
Graphene on Rh(111): STM and AFM studies
The electronic and crystallographic structure of the graphene/Rh(111) moir\'e
lattice is studied via combination of density-functional theory calculations
and scanning tunneling and atomic force microscopy (STM and AFM). Whereas the
principal contrast between hills and valleys observed in STM does not depend on
the sign of applied bias voltage, the contrast in atomically resolved AFM
images strongly depends on the frequency shift of the oscillating AFM tip. The
obtained results demonstrate the perspectives of application atomic force
microscopy/spectroscopy for the probing of the chemical contrast at the
surface.Comment: manuscript and supplementary information; submitted to Appl. Phys.
Lett. on 01.03.201
Raman Topography and Strain Uniformity of Large-Area Epitaxial Graphene
We report results from two-dimensional Raman spectroscopy studies of
large-area epitaxial graphene grown on SiC. Our work reveals unexpectedly large
variation in Raman peak position across the sample resulting from inhomogeneity
in the strain of the graphene film, which we show to be correlated with
physical topography by coupling Raman spectroscopy with atomic force
microscopy. We report that essentially strain free graphene is possible even
for epitaxial graphene.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
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