12 research outputs found
New Experimental Limits on Macroscopic Forces Below 100 Microns
Results of an experimental search for new macroscopic forces with Yukawa
range between 5 and 500 microns are presented. The experiment uses 1 kHz
mechanical oscillators as test masses with a stiff conducting shield between
them to suppress backgrounds. No signal is observed above the instrumental
thermal noise after 22 hours of integration time. These results provide the
strongest limits to date between 10 and 100 microns, improve on previous limits
by as much as three orders of magnitude, and rule out half of the remaining
parameter space for predictions of string-inspired models with low-energy
supersymmetry breaking. New forces of four times gravitational strength or
greater are excluded at the 95% confidence level for interaction ranges between
200 and 500 microns.Comment: 25 Pages, 7 Figures: Minor Correction
Quantitative Contact Resonance Force Microscopy for Viscoelastic Measurement of Soft Materials at the Solid–Liquid Interface
Viscoelastic
property measurements made at the solid–liquid
interface are key to characterizing materials for a variety of biological
and industrial applications. Further, nanostructured materials require
nanoscale measurements. Here, material loss tangents (tan δ)
were extracted from confounding liquid effects in nanoscale contact
resonance force microscopy (CR-FM), an atomic force microscope based
technique for observing mechanical properties of surfaces. Obtaining
reliable CR-FM viscoelastic measurements in liquid is complicated
by two effects. First, in liquid, spurious signals arise during cantilever
excitation. Second, it is challenging to separate changes to cantilever
behavior due to the sample from changes due to environmental damping
and added mass effects. We overcame these challenges by applying photothermal
cantilever excitation in multiple resonance modes and a predictive
model for the hydrodynamic effects. We demonstrated quantitative,
nanoscale viscoelastic CR-FM measurements of polymers at the solid–liquid
interface. The technique is demonstrated on a point-by-point basis
on polymer samples and while imaging in contact mode on a fixed plant
cell wall. Values of tan δ for measurements made in water agreed
with the values for measurements in air for some experimental conditions
on polystyrene and for all examined conditions on polypropylene
Atomic force microscopy with sub-picoNewton force stability for biological applications
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) is widely used in the biological sciences. Despite 25. years of technical developments, two popular modes of bioAFM, imaging and single molecule force spectroscopy, remain hindered by relatively poor force precision and stability. Recently, we achieved both sub-pN force precision and stability under biologically useful conditions (in liquid at room temperature). Importantly, this sub-pN level of performance is routinely accessible using a commercial cantilever on a commercial instrument. The two critical results are that (. i) force precision and stability were limited by the gold coating on the cantilevers, and (. ii) smaller yet stiffer cantilevers did not lead to better force precision on time scales longer than 25. ms. These new findings complement our previous work that addressed tip-sample stability. In this review, we detail the methods needed to achieve this sub-pN force stability and demonstrate improvements in force spectroscopy and imaging when using uncoated cantilevers. With this improved cantilever performance, the widespread use of nonspecific biomolecular attachments becomes a limiting factor in high-precision studies. Thus, we conclude by briefly reviewing site-specific covalent-immobilization protocols for linking a biomolecule to the substrate and to the AFM tip. © 2013
Routine and Timely Sub-picoNewton Force Stability and Precision for Biological Applications of Atomic Force Microscopy
Force drift is a significant, yet unresolved, problem
in atomic
force microscopy (AFM). We show that the primary source of force drift
for a popular class of cantilevers is their gold coating, even though
they are coated on both sides to minimize drift. Drift of the zero-force
position of the cantilever was reduced from 900 nm for gold-coated
cantilevers to 70 nm (<i>N</i> = 10; rms) for uncoated cantilevers
over the first 2 h after wetting the tip; a majority of these uncoated
cantilevers (60%) showed significantly less drift (12 nm, rms). Removing
the gold also led to ∼10-fold reduction in reflected light,
yet short-term (0.1–10 s) force precision improved. Moreover,
improved force precision did not require extended settling; most of
the cantilevers tested (9 out of 15) achieved sub-pN force precision
(0.54 ± 0.02 pN) over a broad bandwidth (0.01–10 Hz) just
30 min after loading. Finally, this precision was maintained while
stretching DNA. Hence, removing gold enables both routine and timely
access to sub-pN force precision in liquid over extended periods (100
s). We expect that many current and future applications of AFM can
immediately benefit from these improvements in force stability and
precision