Title: Atomic Force Microscopy
1Atomic Force Microscopy
- Lecture 7 Outline 1. Introduction to Atomic
Forces2. AFM Modes of operation 3. Case
study 11 Information from AFM
2- Atomic Force Microscopy
- Both STM and atomic force microscopy (AFM) are
part of the scanning probe microscope family. - STM uses the electronic properties between the
tip and the sample. - AFM uses Forces between the sample and a tip on
the end of a cantilever. These forces change as
the tip gets closer to the sample. - So what are these forces???
3Atomic Forces
Force versus distance
Force
Repulsive force
Tip-to-sample separation d
1/d8
1/d7
attractive force
Fig. 7.1 Force - distance curve
4- Let us analyze what is going on in this curve
- 1. As the atoms are gradually brought together,
they first weakly attract each other (1/d8). - 2. Attraction increases (1/d7) until the atoms
are so close together that their electron clouds
begin to repel each other electrostatically.
5- 3 The force goes to zero when the distance
between the atoms reaches a couple of angstroms, - about the length of a chemical bond.
- When the total van der Waals force becomes
positive (repulsive), the atoms are in contact.
64. The slope of the Force curve is very steep in
the repulsive or contact regime. ? As a
result, the repulsive force balances almost any
force that attempts to push the atoms closer
together. ? In AFM this means that when the
cantilever pushes the tip against the sample, the
cantilever bends rather than forcing the tip
atoms closer to the sample atoms.
7Fig. 7.2 AFM cantilever
8- In practice
- An atomically sharp tip is scanned over a surface
with feedback mechanisms that enable the
piezoelectric scanners to maintain the tip at
either - (i) a constant force (to obtain height
information), - (ii) or height (to obtain force information)
above the sample surface. - Tips are typically made from Si3N4 or Si, and
extended down from the end of a cantilever.
9- Modes of operation. There are 3 modes of AFM
operation - Contact mode
- Non-contact mode
- Tapping mode
Contact mode
Non-contact mode
Tapping mode
Fig. 7.3 Modes
10- Contact mode
- The tip is moved over the surface by the
scanning system. - A value of the cantilever deflection, for
example, is selected and then the feedback system
adjusts the height of the cantilever base to keep
this deflection constant as the tip moves over
the surface.
- Non-contact mode
- The cantilever oscillates close to the sample
surface, but without making contact with the
surface. - The capillary force makes this particularly
difficult to control in ambient conditions. Very
stiff cantilevers are needed.
11- Tapping mode
- The cantilever oscillates and the tip makes
repulsive contact with the surface of the sample
at the lowest point of the oscillation. -
- Tapping mode is useful for imaging soft samples
such as biology or polymers. - Oscillation ? resonance condition important
12- The cantilever is usually driven close to a
resonance of the system. - The phase of the cantilever oscillation can
give information about the sample properties,
such as stiffness and mechanical information or
adhesion. - Resonant frequency of the cantilever depends on
its mass and spring constant stiffer cantilevers
have higher resonant frequencies.
13Resonance frequency
Phase Amplitude
Frequency
Question Where would you want to operate system
at??? At resonance?
Fig. 7.4
14Cantilever spring constant k
Cantilever deflection s
s
F k s
Force F
Fig. 7.5
15- Used to measure long range attractive or
repulsive forces between the probe tip and the
sample surface. - Force curves( force-versus-distance curve)
typically show the deflection of the free end of
the AFM cantilever as the fixed end of the
cantilever is brought vertically towards and then
away from the sample surface. - The deflection of the free end of the cantilever
is measured and plotted at many points as the
z-axis scanner extends the cantilever towards the
surface and then retracts it again..
16Force measurements. The AFM can record the amount
of force felt by the cantilever as the probe tip
is brought close to - and even indented into - a
sample surface and then pulled away
Fig. 7.6 Force distance
17Consider a cantilever in air approaching a hard,
incompressible surface such as glass or mica.
AB As the cantilever approaches the surface,
initially the forces are too small to give a
measurable deflection of the cantilever, and the
cantilever remains in its undisturbed position.
BC At some point, the attractive forces
(usually Van der Waals, and capillary forces)
overcome the cantilever spring constant and the
tip jumps into contact with the surface.
18 CD Once the tip is in contact with the sample,
it remains on the surface as the separation
between the base and the sample decreases
further, causing a deflection of the tip and an
increase in the repulsive contact force. DF,
FG As the cantilever is retracted from the
surface, often the tip remains in contact with
the surface due to some adhesion and the
cantilever is deflected downwards. GH At some
point the force from the cantilever will be
enough to overcome the adhesion, and the tip will
break free.
19Applications Molecular interactions
20Modern AFM imaging phase imaging. In tapping
mode, we vibrate the cantilever and we have
resonance frequency. Nornally we ignore any
thing to do with the phase, however there is now
a lot of research in using phase imaging to go
beyond simple topographical mapping to detect
variations in composition, adhesion, friction,
viscoelasticity.
Fig. 7.7 Phase imaging
21Some examples of phase imaging.
Fig. 7.9 Bond pad on an integrated circuit imaged
by TappingMode (left) and phase (right). Pad
contaminated with polyimide produce light
contrast with phase shifts of over 120 deg. 1.5
µm scan
Fig. 7.10 Tapping Mode (L) and phase images (R)
of a composite polymer embedded in a uniform
matrix
22- AFM vs STM
- Resolution of STM is better than AFM because of
the exponential dependence of the tunneling
current on distance. - STM is generally applicable only to conducting
samples while AFM is applied to both conductors
and insulators. - AFM offers the advantage that the writing
voltage and tip-to-substrate spacing can be
controlled independently, whereas with STM the
two parameters are integrally linked.
23Other types of SPM MFM Magnetic Force
Microscopy Fig. 7.11 The dots are made of
permalloy and are 400 nm apart. The MFM image
gives the field distribution for a non polarized
sample, and a few different configuration are
observed.
EFM Electric Force Microscopy
Field of view 10µm x 10µm
Fig. 7.12 Different types of material are
deposited on Si wafers during processing.
24Scanning Capacitance Microscopy SCM Fig. 7.13
shows two sets of AFM measurements (topography
and SCM) for a correctly aligned mask(left) and
for a misaligned mask (right). The large
pictures are a combination of both the topography
(grey) and the SCM image (orange). From these
images the amount and direction of the
misalignment can be observed.
Field of view 30µm x 30µm
25Using AFMs as tools I Dip-pen Nanolithography
- In the year 2000, , they will wonder why it was
not until the year 1960 that anybody began
seriously to move in this direction
(miniaturization)."
Richard Feynman
26Dip-pen Nanolithography
Fig. 7.14 DPN
27http//www.chem.northwestern.edu/mkngrp/dpn.htm
28Using AFMs as tools II Nanomanipulation
"NanoMan and Best Friend" DNA strand
400 x 480 nm scans showing carbon nanotube
manipulation
29- Summary
- AFM uses force to probe the surface topology and
properties of materials. - Tapping modes vs Contact mode
- Phase imaging is a modern way to prove extra
information. - Dip- pen nanolithography is a way to perform
serial writing.