Title: Why Nano now
1Why Nano now?
What has enabled Nanoscience?
An incomplete list . . . .
- Advances in Computing Power
- New Generation of Scientific Instruments
- Scanning Probe Microscopes
Scanning Tunneling Mic. (STM) Atomic Force Mic.
(AFM) Magnetic Force Mic. (MFM) Near Field
Scanning Optical Mic. (NSOM)
Very Sharp Tip scans over sample surface
ATOMIC RESOLUTION
2Scanning Probe Microscopy
- SCANNING TUNNELING MICROSCOPE (STM) First SPM
1983. The Since then, many types of SPM - ATOMIC FORCE MICROSCOPY (AFM, also known as
scanning force microscopy) - MAGNETIC FORCE MICRSCOPY (MFM)
- near field scanning optical microscopy (NSOM)
- Others .
3Scanning Probe Mic Sharp tip
Sharp tip moves over surface and measures some
property
Scanning Probe Tip
Sample
Sample
4STM, Nobel Prize 1986
Binnig and Rohrer
5STM, Imaging
- Battery
Current
Tunneling Current
Sample
Sample
6STM images, Examples
7STM Images, Eigler 1
Don Eigler, IBM
Eigler et al. NATURE 363, 1993
8STM Images, Eigler 2
Don Eigler, IBM
9STM Images, Wilson Ho 1
Wilson Ho, UC Irvine
10STM Images, Wilson Ho 2
Wilson Ho, UC Irvine
11Handmaking Molecules! Wilson Ho 3
Wilson Ho UC, Irvine.
12Atomic Force Microscopy
LASER
LASER Detector
Computer
Mirror
Microscope Tip
Display
Sample Surface scanned back and forth
13- A Thermo Microscopes Explorer AFM
14AFM tips
Made from Si or Si3N4
15Carbon nanotubes
16AFM images Materials
This montage of atomic force microscope images
above shows the (0001) growth surface of a 6H-SiC
crystal grown by physical vapor transport. The
single steps on the surface are each 15.2
Angstroms high, the lattice parameter along
0001. Carnegie Mellon University Material
Science and Engineering
Pittsburgh, PA, USA
http//neon.mems.cmu.edu/rohrer
/rohrer.html
17AFM imagesBiological Samples
The image shows human eurythrocytes, or red blood
cells, imaged in a buffer solution. The shape of
the cell is important to its function. Atomic
force microscopy can be used to identify the
unique characteristics of the cell shape and
size. Luana Scheffer Tel-Aviv University School
of Medicine/Department of Physiology Tel-Aviv,
Israel
18Images and Manipulation of DNA !
Departmento Física de la Materia Condensada UAM
Asylum Research
19Pulling on Biological Fibers
20More than topography
Topography
Hardness
Visco-elasticity
Simultaneous C-AFM images of carbon fiber-epoxy
composite used in aircraft manufacturing,
acquired simultaneously in topography (left),
force modulation (center), and phase detection
(right), modes. The force modulation image
(center) shows the harder (brighter) carbon fiber
in the darker colored epoxy matrix. The phase
image (right), shows similar image contrast, and
shows differences in the visco-elasticity or
"stickiness" across the fiber.
Field of view 15 µm.
21AFM images Carbon Nanotubes
22AFM images Adenovirus
Viral DNA
Atsuko Negishi UNC Mat. Sci.
23AFM, (sub)atomic resolution
24Titin unfolding
25Titin
http//www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/smd_imd/titin/
26Pulling Titin 2
27Pulling Titin 3
28AFM feedback
29Contact Mode
DC deflection maintained by feedback loop
Deflection Force
Piezoelectric translators
30Non-Contact and Tapping Mode
Amplitude maintained by feedback loop
Amplitude Force
31Interaction Potential
Energy
Tip Sample separation
32Resolution and Artifacts
33Tip Shape Effects
34LEGO Atomic Force Microscope