4.8 Article

Mechanics of Interaction and Atomic-Scale Wear of Amplitude Modulation Atomic Force Microscopy Probes

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages 3221-3235

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn305901n

Keywords

atomic-scale wear; AM-AFM; amplitude modulation; tapping mode; peak repulsive force; contact stress; contact mechanics

Funding

  1. NSF [CMMI-0826076, CMMI-0825000, GOALI/CMMI1200019]
  2. STTR [IIP-0638030, IIP-0823002]
  3. Nano/Bio Interface Center through the national science foundation NSEC [DMR08-32802]
  4. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn
  5. Directorate For Engineering [1200019] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Wear is one of the main factors that hinders the performance of probes for atomic force microscopy (AFM), including for the widely used amplitude modulation (AM-AFM) mode. Unfortunately, a comprehensive scientific understanding of nanoscale wear is lacking. We have developed a protocol for conducting consistent and quantitative AM-AFM wear experiments. The protocol involves controlling the tip sample interaction regime during AM-AFM scanning, determining the tip sample contact geometry, calculating the peak repulsive force and normal stress over the course of the wear test, and quantifying the wear volume using high-resolution transmission electron microscopy imaging. The peak repulsive tip sample interaction force is estimated from a closed-form equation accompanied by an effective tip radius measurement procedure, which combines transmission electron microscopy and blind tip reconstruction. The contact stress is estimated by applying Derjaguin-Muller-Toporov contact mechanics model and also numerically solving a general contact mechanics model recently developed for the adhesive contact of arbitrary axisymmetric punch shapes. We discuss the important role that the assumed tip shape geometry plays in calculating both the interaction forces and the contact stresses. Contact stresses are significantly affected by the tip geometry while the peak repulsive force is mainly determined by experimentally controlled parameters, specifically, the free oscillation amplitude and amplitude ratio. The applicability of this protocol is demonstrated experimentally by assessing the performance of diamond-like carbon-coated and silicon-nitride-coated silicon probes scanned over ultrananocrystalline diamond substrates in repulsive mode AM-AFM. There is no sign of fracture or plastic deformation in the case of diamond-like carbon; wear could be characterized as a gradual atom-by-atom process. In contrast, silicon nitride wears through removal of the cluster of atoms and plastic deformation.

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