Topography imaging with a heated atomic force microscope cantilever in tapping mode

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This article describes tapping mode atomic force microscopy (AFM) using a heated AFM cantilever. The electrical and thermal responses of the cantilever were investigated while the cantilever oscillated in free space or was in intermittent contact with a surface. The cantilever oscillates at its mechanical resonant frequency, 70.36 kHz, which is much faster than its thermal time constant of 300 mu s, and so the cantilever operates in thermal steady state. The thermal impedance between the cantilever heater and the sample was measured through the cantilever temperature signal. Topographical imaging was performed on silicon calibration gratings of height 20 and 100 nm. The obtained topography sensitivity is as high as 200 mu V/nm and the resolution is as good as 0.5 nm/Hz(1/2), depending on the cantilever power. The cantilever heating power ranges 0-7 mW, which corresponds to a temperature range of 25-700 degrees C. The imaging was performed entirely using the cantilever thermal signal and no laser or other optics was required. As in conventional AFM, the tapping mode operation demonstrated here can suppress imaging artifacts and enable imaging of soft samples.
Publisher
AMER INST PHYSICS
Issue Date
2007-04
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

DIP-PEN NANOLITHOGRAPHY; DATA-STORAGE; POLYMER; PROBE; MICROCANTILEVERS; DEPOSITION

Citation

REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS, v.78, no.4

ISSN
0034-6748
DOI
10.1063/1.2721422
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/245503
Appears in Collection
ME-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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