86 research outputs found
Noncontact atomic force microscopy simulator with phase-locked-loop controlled frequency detection and excitation
A simulation of an atomic force microscope operating in the constant
amplitude dynamic mode is described. The implementation mimics the electronics
of a real setup including a digital phase-locked loop (PLL). The PLL is not
only used as a very sensitive frequency detector, but also to generate the
time-dependent phase shifted signal driving the cantilever. The optimum
adjustments of individual functional blocks and their joint performance in
typical experiments are determined in detail. Prior to testing the complete
setup, the performances of the numerical PLL and of the amplitude controller
were ascertained to be satisfactory compared to those of the real components.
Attention is also focused on the issue of apparent dissipation, that is, of
spurious variations in the driving amplitude caused by the nonlinear
interaction occurring between the tip and the surface and by the finite
response times of the various controllers. To do so, an estimate of the minimum
dissipated energy that is detectable by the instrument upon operating
conditions is given. This allows us to discuss the relevance of apparent
dissipation that can be conditionally generated with the simulator in
comparison to values reported experimentally. The analysis emphasizes that
apparent dissipation can contribute to the measured dissipation up to 15% of
the intrinsic dissipated energy of the cantilever interacting with the surface,
but can be made negligible when properly adjusting the controllers, the PLL
gains and the scan speed. It is inferred that the experimental values of
dissipation usually reported in the literature cannot only originate in
apparent dissipation, which favors the hypothesis of "physical" channels of
dissipation
Distance dependence of force and dissipation in non-contact atomic force microscopy on Cu(100) and Al(111)
The dynamic characteristics of a tip oscillating in the nc-AFM mode in close
vicinity to a Cu(100)-surface are investigated by means of phase variation
experiments in the constant amplitude mode. The change of the quality factor
upon approaching the surface deduced from both frequency shift and excitation
versus phase curves yield to consistent values. The optimum phase is found to
be independent of distance. The dependence of the quality factor on distance is
related to 'true' damping, because artefacts related to phase misadjustment can
be excluded. The experimental results, as well as on-resonance measurements at
different bias voltages on an Al(111) surface, are compared to Joule
dissipation and to a model of dissipation in which long-range forces lead to
viscoelastic deformations
Analytical Approach to the Local Contact Potential Difference on (001) Ionic Surfaces: Implications for Kelvin Probe Force Microscopy
An analytical model of the electrostatic force between the tip of a
non-contact Atomic Force Microscope (nc-AFM) and the (001) surface of an ionic
crystal is reported. The model is able to account for the atomic contrast of
the local contact potential difference (CPD) observed while nc-AFM-based Kelvin
Probe Force Microscopy (KPFM) experiments. With the goal in mind to put in
evidence this short-range electrostatic force, the Madelung potential arising
at the surface of the ionic crystal is primarily derived. The expression of the
force which is deduced can be split into two major contributions: the first
stands for the coupling between the microscopic structure of the tip apex and
the capacitor formed between the tip, the ionic crystal and the
counter-electrode; the second term depicts the influence of the Madelung
surface potential on the mesoscopic part of the tip, independently from its
microscopic structure. These short-range electrostatic forces are in the range
of ten pico-Newtons. When explicitly considering the crystal polarization, an
analytical expression of the bias voltage to be applied on the tip to
compensate for the local CPD, i.e. to cancel the short-range electrostatic
force, is derived. The compensated CPD has the lateral periodicity of the
Madelung surface potential. However, the strong dependence on the tip geometry,
the applied modulation voltage as well as the tip-sample distance, which can
even lead to an overestimation of the real surface potential, makes
quantitative KPFM measurements of the local CPD extremely difficult
Probing Polarization and Dielectric Function of Molecules with Higher Order Harmonics in Scattering-near-field Scanning Optical Microscopy
The idealized system of an atomically flat metallic surface [highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG)] and an organic monolayer (porphyrin) was used to determine whether the dielectric function and associated properties of thin films can be accessed with scanningânear-field scanning optical microscopy (s-NSOM). Here, we demonstrate the use of harmonics up to fourth order and the polarization dependence of incident light to probe dielectric properties on idealized samples of monolayers of organic molecules on atomically smooth substrates. An analytical treatment of light/ sample interaction using the s-NSOM tip was developed in order to quantify the dielectric properties. The theoretical analysis and numerical modeling, as well as experimental data, demonstrate that higher order harmonic scattering can be used to extract the dielectric properties of materials with tens of nanometer spatial resolution. To date, the third harmonic provides the best lateral resolution(~50 nm) and dielectric constant contrast for a porphyrin film on HOPG
Advances in atomic force microscopy
This article reviews the progress of atomic force microscopy (AFM) in
ultra-high vacuum, starting with its invention and covering most of the recent
developments. Today, dynamic force microscopy allows to image surfaces of
conductors \emph{and} insulators in vacuum with atomic resolution. The mostly
used technique for atomic resolution AFM in vacuum is frequency modulation AFM
(FM-AFM). This technique, as well as other dynamic AFM methods, are explained
in detail in this article. In the last few years many groups have expanded the
empirical knowledge and deepened the theoretical understanding of FM-AFM.
Consequently, the spatial resolution and ease of use have been increased
dramatically. Vacuum AFM opens up new classes of experiments, ranging from
imaging of insulators with true atomic resolution to the measurement of forces
between individual atoms.Comment: In press (Reviews of Modern Physics, scheduled for July 2003), 86
pages, 44 figure
Electrons, Photons, and Force: Quantitative Single-Molecule Measurements from Physics to Biology
Single-molecule measurement techniques have illuminated unprecedented details of chemical behavior, including observations of the motion of a single molecule on a surface, and even the vibration of a single bond within a molecule. Such measurements are critical to our understanding of entities ranging from single atoms to the most complex protein assemblies. We provide an overview of the strikingly diverse classes of measurements that can be used to quantify single-molecule properties, including those of single macromolecules and single molecular assemblies, and discuss the quantitative insights they provide. Examples are drawn from across the single-molecule literature, ranging from ultrahigh vacuum scanning tunneling microscopy studies of adsorbate diffusion on surfaces to fluorescence studies of protein conformational changes in solution
Micrometre-long covalent organic fibres by photoinitiated chain-growth radical polymerization on an alkali-halide surface
On-surface polymerization is a promising technique to prepare organic functional nanomaterials that are challenging to synthesize in solution, but it is typically used on metal substrates, which play a catalytic role. Previous examples on insulating surfaces have involved intermediate self-assembled structures, which face high barriers to diffusion, or annealing to higher temperatures, which generally causes rapid dewetting and desorption of the monomers. Here we report the photoinitiated radical polymerization, initiated from a two-dimensional gas phase, of a dimaleimide monomer on an insulating KCl surface. Polymer fibres up to 1âÎŒm long are formed through chain-like rather than step-like growth. Interactions between potassium cations and the dimaleimideâs oxygen atoms facilitate the propagation of the polymer fibres along a preferred axis of the substrate over long distances. Density functional theory calculations, non-contact atomic force microscopy imaging and manipulations at room temperature were used to explore the initiation and propagation processes, as well as the structure and stability of the resulting one-dimensional polymer fibres
Cu-TBPP and PTCDA molecules on insulating surfaces studied by ultra-high-vacuum non-contact AFM
The adsorption of two kinds of porphyrin (Cu-TBPP) and perylene (PTCDA)
derived organic molecules deposited on KBr and Al2O3 surfaces has been studied
by non-contact force microscopy in ultra-high vacuum, our goal being the
assembly of ordered molecular arrangements on insulating surfaces at room
temperature. On a Cu(100) surface, well ordered islands of Cu-TBPP molecules
were successfully imaged. On KBr and Al2O3 surfaces, it was found that the same
molecules aggregate in small clusters at step edges, rather than forming
ordered monolayers. First measurements with PTCDA on KBr show that
nanometre-scale rectangular pits in the surface can act as traps to confine
small molecular assemblies
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