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Atomic Force Microscopy:

- Real-time detection of probe-loss in atomic
force microscopy
- Transient force-atomic force microscopy (TF-AFM):
a new interrogation method
- Thermally driven non-contact atomic force
microscopy
- Systems viewpoint to AFM based nano-interrogation
- Study of complex dynamics in atomic force
microscopy
-
Real time detection of probe-loss
- In AFM imaging the cantilever is the main and only
probe of the sample. Thus when the cantilever loses
interaction with the sample no information about the
sample can be derived. Detection of probe-loss seems
like a difficult problem; how does one conclude the loss
of the measuring device itself. Conventional imaging
signals like the amplitude signal and the control signal
that regulates the tip-sample separation can not
identify the areas of probe-loss.
- NDSL group has devised a real-time methodology to
determine regions of dynamic atomic force microscopy
based image where the cantilever fails to be an
effective probe of the sample. A quantitative
measure called reliability index is proposed as
diagnostic measure for determining probe-loss.
This signal, apart from indicating the probe-loss
affected regions, can be used to minimize such regions
of the image, thus aiding high speed AFM applications.
- This method is the first reported result that
identifies spurious data due to probe-loss in real-time.
Probe-loss is also referred to as "parachuting" in some
literature.
-
Thermally driven non-contact atomic force microscopy
(ThNcAfm): using noise for useful purposes.
- ThNcAfm is a method to maintain the cantilever in the
attractive part of the tip-sample interaction potential.
This region of the tip-sample interaction potential is a
good observation "outpost" for the cantilever as it does
no
t intrude the sample process being observed
excessively neither is it so far that observation of the
sample process evolution becomes difficult.
- ThNcAfm uses the cantilever's thermal noise response
to actively position the sample using the piezo
positioner, in such a manner that the the cantilever tip
can be maintained in the attractive part for greater
than 30 minutes. It uses the thermal noise response to
cancel the drift effects.
- As the observation period is long, one can dig out
small but persistent deformations of the sample
evolution. ThNcAfm is capable of detecting sample
deformation in the sub-Angstrom regime.
-
Transient force-atomic force microscopy (TF-AFM): a
new interrogation method
- TF-AFM imaging was invented in the NanoDynamics
Systems Lab. Prior to this method of imaging most
imaging methods used steady-state signals like amplitude
and phase for imaging purposes. These signals and the
related imaging techniques are fundamentally limited by
the quality factor (Q) of the cantilever. TF-AFM
interrogation bandwidth is independent of the Q of the
cantilever and thus the bandwidth can be improved by a
factor in the order of Q.
- The TF-AFM method employs a model of the cantilever.
The model of the cantilever is determined by standard
frequency response methods. This model of the cantilever
is built into a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA)
card. The main concept is to compare the output as
produced by the FPGA card that implements the model and
the actual cantilever output. The notion utilized is
that any mismatch between the FPGA output and the actual
cantilever output is derived due to fact that the sample
affects the actual cantilever but not the FPGA
implemented model. This observer based method can detect
the sharp transitions in the sample features.

- The images on the side show that the TF-AFM based
interrogation of DNA produces a highly resolved image of
DNA when other imaging signals like height, phase and
amplitude provide a poor image of the DNA. The DNA
sample is a Lammda DNA that is approximately 2 nanometer
in height. The lateral scan size is 2 micrometers. The
scan rate was 12 Hz. The images were obatined in
real-time in the sense that the image can be viewed as
the scan proceeds. The experiment was done on a Veeco
Multimode AFM, with one of the auxiliary imaging signals
being the output of the FPGA board. The scanner used was
the J-scanner.
- Similar high fidelity images were obtained at higher
scan rates near 25 Hz. The limiting factor at such high
rate imaging was found to be the nanopositioning system
that introduced imaging artifacts.
- This method is now patented under patent number
7,066,014: Method to Transiently Detect Samples in
Atomic Force Microscopes. For a demonstration of
experimental data driven animation of how TF-AFM does
bit detection
click here. This application of TF-AFM is
particularly well-suited for high density data storage
applications.
-
Fundamental limitations in AFM based nano-interrogation
- The dynamic mode AM-AFM operation is the preferred
mode of AFM interrogation due to its gentleness, high
resolution and its ability to function under fluids that
makes it possible to use AFM for bio investigation under
native conditions.
- In most earlier literature, the first harmonic of the
cantilever oscillation data is utilized to obtain sample
characteristics. Our work has demonstrated that the
first harmonic behavior can be explained by using
a piecewise linear model of the tip-sample interaction
potential. Though this aspect of dynamic AFM is
operationally desirable, it also points to fundamental
limitations on how well the first harmonic data can
discern different tip-sample interaction potentials.
Motivated by the possibility of using higher harmonic,
we have found upper bounds on the magnitude of higher
harmonics assuming coarse information on the tip-sample
interaction characteristics. Thus the analysis does not
require the precise knowledge of the tip-sample
interaction characteristics; only an approximate
knowledge of the tip-sample interaction potential is
needed. The framework also allows to flag when the
assumed model is not valid. These bounds are the first
step in study the fundamental limitations of dynamic AFM
imaging.
-
Systems viewpoint to AFM based nano-interrogation
- Prior to the work of our group, the AFM system was
not interpreted from a systems point of view i.e. in
terms of blocks that process input and produce outputs.
Our work for the first time, visualized the AFM dynamics
as a interconnection of two systems where one system is
the cantilever system and the other system is the
tip-sample interaction system. The cantilever system
takes in as inputs the force from the sample and any
other external drive input and produces the
tip-deflection as the output. The tip-sample interaction
system takes in as inputs the tip position and possibly
the tip velocity and produces as the output the sample
force on the cantilever.
- The viewpoint of AFM as an interconnection of two
systems streamlines the management of known information
and the associated uncertainty in AFM. The cantilever
system is often precisely known and can be well modeled
as a Linear Time Invariant system with well determined
parameters and the tip-sample nonlinearity is the
unknown that may admit a coarse characterization but
does not admit a precise characterization.
- The systems viewpoint has facilitated new ways of
nano-interrogation (see TF-AFM) and has led to basic
understanding of the dynamic mode AFM operation.
-
Study of complex dynamics in atomic force microscopy
- Behavior of periodic orbits under perturbation is of
considerable interest for dynamical systems. If the
sample is absent in the tapping-mode setup, it can be
shown that the cantilever dynamics approximated by its
first mode has a single homoclinic orbit, which is
formed by the stable and the unstable manifolds of the
saddle type, fixed points. Under the perturbation formed
by the sinusoidal forcing and the sample presence the
single homoclinic orbit would break into separate stable
and unstable manifolds. Conley-Moser and Smale-Birkhoff
results show that if the stable and the unstable
manifolds intersect transversely then there is an
invariant set where the dynamics is topologically
equivalent to the shift map on N symbols. The shift map
on N symbols exhibits complex behavior. It has a
countable infinity of periodic orbits and a dense orbit.
Because of the topological equivalence under transverse
intersections, the micro-cantilever dynamics under the
perturbation will exhibit such a rich behavior.
- The Melnikov function provides a measure of the
distance between the stable and the unstable manifolds
of the perturbed system, which intersect if the Melnikov
function evaluates to zero.
- Under this topic, we have studied the possibility of
such rich behavior for the dynamics of the
micro-cantilever under a Lennard-Jones potential, which
consists of long-range attractive and short-range
repulsive forces. The Melnikov function is evaluated and
the parameter space for which the Melnikov function is
zero is identified. Further, control strategies are
devised that eliminate the possibility of the
complex-dynamics.
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