Ex situ and in situ characterization of patterned photoreactive thin organic surface layers using friction force microscopy

Scanning. 2014 Nov-Dec;36(6):590-8. doi: 10.1002/sca.21159. Epub 2014 Sep 2.

Abstract

Photolithographic methods allow an easy lateral top-down patterning and tuning of surface properties with photoreactive molecules and polymers. Employing friction force microscopy (FFM), we present here different FFM-based methods that enable the characterization of several photoreactive thin organic surface layers. First, three ex situ methods have been evaluated for the identification of irradiated and non-irradiated zones on the same organosilane sample by irradiation through different types of masks. These approaches are further extended to a time dependent ex situ FFM measurement, which allows to study the irradiation time dependent evolution of the resulting friction forces by sequential irradiation through differently sized masks in crossed geometry. Finally, a newly designed in situ FFM measurement, which uses a commercial bar-shaped cantilever itself as a noncontact shadow mask, enables the determination of time dependent effects on the surface modification during the photoreaction.

Keywords: adhesion force; friction force microscopy; photolithography; photoreactive surface layers.