|
| |||||
HOME RESEARCH PROJECTS LABORATORIES PUBLICATIONS PEOPLE | |||||
|
Atomic Force Microscopy The Strongin research group has two scanning probe microscopes an Agilent 5100 (formerly Molecular Imaging Pico LE) and a Veeco Multimode. The Agilent instrument is a tip scan instrument, equipped with small (10 µm) and large AFM scanners (150 µm), as well as a 2 µm STM scan head. This instrument is equipped with an environmental chamber, is capable of heating to 200 C, and is excellent for working in solution. The Veeco Multimode is a sample scan instrument with a large area scanner. Tip scan and sample scan refer to the location of the piezo in the instrument’s design, the part of the system that actually moves during data collection. AFM BASICS
There are two primary modes of AFM operation, contact and intermittent contact. Almost all AFM image types can be related back to these two modes, as they are simply the result of different methods of tip excitation or the collection of alternate signals. In contact mode AFM, the tip is pushed into the sample surface resulting in some amount of deflection measurable in the photodiode. The amount of force exerted on the sample surface is a function of the tips spring constant (force constant) and the amount of deflection (how much the tip has been bent), essentially Hook’s law. While working in contact mode deflection, topography, and friction images can be collected. A deflection image is the raw data collected by the photodiode, given in volts. A topography image is created from the deflection image, and is the distance the piezo traveled to return the deflection to the set point. Friction images come from a secondary signal, in this case from the torsion of the tip measured by the difference in the left and right portion of the photodiode.
|
|
| |||
| Email: Webmaster | |||||