Cantilever signature of tip detachment during contact resonance AFM

Beilstein J Nanotechnol. 2021 Nov 24:12:1286-1296. doi: 10.3762/bjnano.12.96. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Contact resonance atomic force microscopy, piezoresponse force microscopy, and electrochemical strain microscopy are atomic force microscopy modes in which the cantilever is held in contact with the sample at a constant average force while monitoring the cantilever motion under the influence of a small, superimposed vibrational signal. Though these modes depend on permanent contact, there is a lack of detailed analysis on how the cantilever motion evolves when this essential condition is violated. This is not an uncommon occurrence since higher operating amplitudes tend to yield better signal-to-noise ratio, so users may inadvertently reduce their experimental accuracy by inducing tip-sample detachment in an effort to improve their measurements. We shed light on this issue by deliberately pushing both our experimental equipment and numerical simulations to the point of tip-sample detachment to explore cantilever dynamics during a useful and observable threshold feature in the measured response. Numerical simulations of the analytical model allow for extended insight into cantilever dynamics such as full-length deflection and slope behavior, which can be challenging or unobtainable in a standard equipment configuration. With such tools, we are able to determine the cantilever motion during detachment and connect the qualitative and quantitative behavior to experimental features.

Keywords: atomic force microscopy (AFM); contact resonance; nonlinear normal mode (NNM); photothermal excitation; tip–sample detachment.

Grants and funding

This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. CMMI-1726274 GOALI. The authors would also like to credit both the Ross Fellowship and the Alpha P. Jamison Professorship Endowment at Purdue University for providing support during this work.