Title of article :
Force–distance studies with piezoelectric tuning forks
below 4.2 K
Author/Authors :
J. Rychen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
Piezoelectric quartz tuning forks have been employed as the force sensor in a dynamic mode scanning force microscope
operating at temperatures down to 1.7 K at He-gas pressures of typically 5 mbar. An electrochemically etched tungsten tip
glued to one of the tuning fork prongs acts as the local force sensor. Its oscillation amplitude can be tuned between a few
angstroms and tens of nanometers. Quality factors of up to 120 000 allow a very accurate measurement of small frequency
shifts. Three calibration procedures are compared which allow the determination of the proportionality constant between
frequency shift and local force gradient based on the harmonic oscillator model and on electrostatic forces. The calibrated
sensor is then used for a study of the interaction between the tip and a highly oriented pyrolytic graphite HOPG.substrate.
Force gradient and dissipated power can be recorded simultaneously. It is found that during approaching the tip to the
sample considerable power starts to be dissipated although the force gradient is still negative, i.e., the tip is still in the
attractive regime. This observation concurs with experiments with true atomic resolution, which seem to require the same
tip–sample separation. q2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved
Keywords :
atomic force microscopy , Tip–sample interaction , Frequency modulation force microscopy , Tuningforks , Kelvin force microscopy , Dynamic force microscopy
Journal title :
Applied Surface Science
Journal title :
Applied Surface Science