Title: Basic Imaging Modes
1Basic Imaging Modes
- Contact mode AFM
- Lateral Force Microscopy ( LFM)
- Scanning tunneling microscopy
2Review last lecture
Position sensitive Photo-detector
3Summarize Main components of AFM
AFM tip/cantilever assembly Force detection
system Electronic Feedback system (Electronic
Brain) Scanner ( precise position control
system) Vibration damping system
4Position sensitive photodetector
5Force Detection system
Hook law F - kx
k Spring constant of the cantilever Materials,
and dimension of the cantilever
k increases with lever thickness, decreases with
lever length
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7Contact Mode The original AFM mode, providing
topographic imaging and a gateway to advanced
techniques. Contact mode is the basis for all
AFM techniques in which the probe tip is in
constant physical contact with the sample
surface. While the tip scans along the surface,
the sample topography induces a vertical
deflection of the cantilever. A feedback loop
maintains this deflection at a preset load force
and uses the feedback response to generate a
topographic image. Contact Mode is suitable for
materials science, biological applications and
basic research. It also serves as a basis for
further SPM techniques that require direct
tip-sample contact.
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9Atomic Force Microscopy
Force mapping
10Smarter imaging ---Need a Feedback system
11Piezoelectric Scanners (Scanning Mechanism )
Piezoelectric effect piezoelectric crystals
The electrical polarization produces is
proportional to the stress and the direction. The
polarization changes if the stress changes from
compression to tension
Reverse piezoelectric effect
Materials lead zirconate titanates
( Pb(Ti, Zr)O3) PZT type )
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14Review last lecture
Youtube
AFM Principle - How AFM Works
15Lateral Force Microscope ( LFM) Or Friction
Force Microscope ( FFM)
Langmuir-Blodgett single-layer thin film made of
a mixture of behenic acid (BA) and diphenyl
bis-(octadecylamino)phosphonium bromide (DPOP).
Both topographic (left) and LFM (right) images
were acquired simultaneously.
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17Measure lateral twist of the cantilever
18Cantilever Movements and optical deflection
detection
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20- Lateral Force Microscopy (LFM) is derived from
Contact Mode imaging. In Contact Mode, the
vertical bending of the cantilever probe is
measured as it scans across the surface. By also
measuring the lateral bending of the cantilever,
information regarding the surface friction
characteristics of a sample can be determined. - Lateral forces can arise from changes in the
frictional coefficient of a region on the sample
surface or from onsets of changes in height. LFM
is therefore useful for measuring lack of
homogeneity in surface materials and producing
images with enhanced edges of topographic
features.
21Contact imaging mode
Advantages Disadvantages
22Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM)
- Tunneling current ( pA nA) between tip and
sample is exponentially dependent on their
separation ( lt 10 angstroms), the local density
of electronic states of the sample and the local
barrier height. The density of electronic states
is the amount of electrons exit at specific
energy. - Topographic image formed by feedback loop which
maintains a constant tunneling current during
scanning - Typically limited to conductive and
semiconductive surfaces
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24Scanning Tunneling Microscopy
V
Feel
I
Tunneling Current
D distance between tip and sample
25Flat surface
Current image
Electronic brain
Resolution
26Tip sharpness How to make a tip
27Smart way!
28Current measurement Feedback system
29Tunneling Current
wavelike properties of electrons in quantum
mechanics. There is still a non-zero probability
that it may traverse the forbidden region and
reappear on the other side of the barrier.
30If two conductors are so close that their leak
out electron wavefunctions overlap. The electron
wavefunctions at the Femi level K is given
by
31m is mass of electron, ? is the local
tunneling barrier height or the average work
function of the tip and sample. When a small
voltage, V is applied between the tip and the
sample, the overlapped electron wavefunction
permits quantum mechanical tunneling and a
current, I will flow across the vacuum gap.
At low voltage and temperature
d is the distance between tip and sample. If the
distance increased by 1 Angstrom, the current
flow decreased by an order of magnitude, so the
sensitivity to vertical distance is terribly
high.
32Caution
STM does NOT probe the nuclear position directly,
but rather it is a probe of the electron
density, so STM images do not always show the
position of the atoms, and it depends on the
nature of the surface and the magnitude and sign
of the tunneling current.
33Local barrier height Equation (2) obviously shows
the current is exponentially depends on both gap
distance and the local barrier height Change of
current might be due to corrugation of the
surface or to the locally varying local barrier
height. The two effects can be separated by the
relationship.
34Local Density of States (LDOS) Density of States
(DOS) represents the amount of electrons exist
at specific values of energy. The tunneling
conductance, (or I/V ) is proportional to the
LDOS. wh
ere r(r, E) is the local density of states of the
sample. Keeping the gap distance constant,
measure the current change with respect to the
bias voltage can probe the LDOS of the sample.
Moreover, changing the polarity of bias voltage
can get local occupied and unoccupied states.
35Electronic states in Tip
Electronic states in sample
Unoccupied
unoccupied
Occupied
Occupied
When the tip is negatively biased, electrons
tunnel from the occupied states of the tip to
the unoccupied states of the sample. If the tip
is positively biased, electrons tunnel from the
occupied states of sample to the unoccupied
states of the tip.
36Si ( 100 ) surface Change tip bias
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38You tube