Thermal measurements using multiple frequency atomic force microscopy
10556793 ยท 2020-02-11
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01Q60/24
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
Apparatus and techniques for extracting information carried in higher eigenmodes or harmonics of an oscillating cantilever or other oscillating sensors in atomic force microscopy and related MEMs work are described. Similar apparatus and techniques for extracting information from piezoelectric, polymer and other materials using contact resonance with multiple excitation signals are also described.
Claims
1. An atomic force microscope, comprising: a cantilever probe providing two separate legs culminating at a tip, and operable for carrying out thermal measurements; a connection to the probe, which is energized for heating the tip; a controller that controls heating the tip of the cantilever probe; a feedback loop, controlling a distance between a base of said cantilever probe and a surface of a sample to maintain the tip of the cantilever probe at a specified location relative to the surface in a Z-axis direction; a driver, exciting the cantilever probe with at least multiple harmonic frequencies of the cantilever probe; and a measurement part, measuring amplitude, frequency and/or phase of the cantilever at different excitation frequencies, wherein said microscope stores a calibration table indicative of calibrating a bending amount of the cantilever probe during heating, by ramping a temperature of the cantilever tip between different temperatures while measuring deflections over a temperature range, and uses the information indicative of calibration deflection to compensate said deflections of the cantilever probe caused by said heating of the tip.
2. The microscope of claim 1, further comprising a processor using the information by fitting the calibration table to a polynomial, and subtracting the polynomial from the deflections caused by expansion of the tip.
3. The microscope of claim 1, wherein said feedback loop maintains a constant deflection of the cantilever.
4. The microscope of claim 1, wherein said feedback loop balances an energy used to excite cantilever motion against energy lost to tip-sample interaction and intrinsic dissipation of the cantilever.
5. The microscope of claim 1, wherein said driver uses a frequency source to directly drive the cantilever.
6. The microscope of claim 1, wherein said driver creates a magnetic state adjacent the cantilever.
7. The microscope as in claim 1, wherein said driver excites at two or more different synthesized frequencies that have been summed together by a circuit element.
8. The microscope as in claim 7, further comprising lock-in amplifiers, connected to receive each synthesized frequency as a reference signal.
9. The microscope as in claim 1, wherein said two separated legs of the cantilever probe are electrically connected to separately.
10. The microscope of claim 9, wherein one of said two separated legs is connected to the applied voltage, and an other leg is connected to ground.
11. The microscope of claim 9, wherein said legs are connected differentially to at least one differential amplifier.
12. A method of operating an atomic force microscope which includes a cantilever probe, comprising: exciting the cantilever probe using two or more different synthesized frequencies that have been summed together by a circuit element, where the two synthesized frequencies each comprise harmonics of the cantilever probe; providing each synthesized frequency as a reference signal to a lock-in amplifier; heating a tip of the cantilever probe; and measuring deflections of the cantilever probe caused by said heating and said exciting, using a feedback loop to maintain the tip at a desired location relative to a surface of a sample, to characterize the surface.
13. The method as in claim 12, wherein said measuring comprises measuring at least one of amplitude, frequency and/or phase of the cantilever at the different frequencies.
14. The method of claim 12, wherein the cantilever probe has two separated legs that meet at the tip, and where the exciting comprises driving a potential across said two separate legs.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein said connecting comprises connecting one of said legs to an applied voltage, and connecting the other leg to ground.
16. The method of claim 14, wherein said connecting comprises connecting to said legs differentially with a separate amplifier connected to each leg.
17. The method of claim 12, further comprising first calibrating a bending amount of the cantilever probe during heating, by ramping a temperature of the cantilever tip between different temperatures, while measuring deflections, over a temperature range, to find and store information indicative of calibration deflection and using the information indicative of calibration deflection to compensate said deflections of the cantilever probe caused by said heating and exciting caused by the tip.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein said using the information comprises fitting the calibration deflection to a polynomial, and subtracting the polynomial from the deflections caused by expansion caused by the tip.
19. The method of claim 12, wherein said feedback loop maintains a constant deflection of the cantilever.
20. The method as in claim 12, wherein the tip is heated until the onset of local melting.
21. The method as in claim 12, wherein said feedback loop balances an energy used to excite cantilever motion against energy lost to tip-sample interaction and intrinsic dissipation of the cantilever.
22. The method as in claim 12, wherein said exciting comprises using a frequency source to directly drive the cantilever.
23. The method as in claim 12, wherein said exciting includes creating a magnetic state adjacent the cantilever.
24. A method, comprising: operating an atomic force microscope which includes a cantilever probe; exciting the cantilever probe using at least one harmonic frequency of the probe; initially calibrating a bending amount of the cantilever probe during heating, by ramping a temperature of the cantilever tip between different temperatures, while measuring deflections, over a temperature range, to find and store information indicative of calibration deflection; heating the cantilever tip to measure a surface, and measuring deflections of the cantilever probe caused by the tip of the cantilever probe based on said heating, while using a feedback loop to maintain the tip at a desired location relative to the surface to find deflection information, and using the information indicative of calibration deflection to compensate said deflections of the cantilever probe caused by said heating of the tip; and using the deflection information compensated by said calibration deflection to characterize the surface.
25. The method as in claim 24, wherein said exciting comprises exciting the cantilever at two or more different synthesized frequencies that have been summed together by a circuit element, where the two synthesized frequencies each comprise harmonic frequencies of the cantilever probe.
26. The method as in claim 25, further comprising providing each of the two or more different synthesized frequencies as respective reference signals to a lock-in amplifier.
27. The method as in claim 25, wherein said measuring comprises measuring at least one of amplitude, frequency and/or phase of the cantilever at the different frequencies.
28. The method of claim 24, wherein the cantilever probe has two separated legs that meet at the tip, and further comprising electrically connecting to each of said two separate legs separately.
29. The method of claim 28, wherein said connecting comprises connecting one of said legs to an applied voltage, and connecting as the other leg to ground.
30. The method of claim 28, wherein said connecting comprises connecting to said legs differentially with a separate amplifier connected to each leg.
31. The method of claim 24, wherein said using the information comprises fitting the calibration deflection to a polynomial, and subtracting the polynomial from the deflections caused by expansion of the tip.
32. The method of claim 24, wherein said feedback loop maintains a constant deflection of the cantilever.
33. The method as in claim 24, wherein said feedback loop balances an energy used to excite cantilever motion against energy lost to tip-sample interaction and intrinsic dissipation of the cantilever.
34. The method as in claim 24, wherein said exciting comprises using a frequency source to directly drive the cantilever.
35. The method as in claim 24, wherein said exciting includes creating a magnetic state adjacent the cantilever.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
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(25) The sample 1010 is positioned below the cantilever probe 1020. The chip of the cantilever probe 1030 is driven by a mechanical actuator 1040, preferably a piezoelectric actuator, but other methods to induce cantilever motion known to those versed in the art could also be used. The motion of the cantilever probe 1020 relative to the frame of the microscope 1050 is measured with a detector 1060, which could be an optical lever or another method known to those versed in the art. The cantilever chip 1030 is moved relative to the sample 1010 by a scanning apparatus 1070, preferably a piezo/flexure combination, but other methods known to those versed in the art could also be used.
(26) The motion imparted to the cantilever chip 1030 by actuator 1040 is controlled by excitation electronics that include at least two frequency synthesizers 1080 and 1090. There could be additional synthesizers if more than two cantilever eigenmodes are to be employed. The signals from these frequency synthesizers could be summed together by an analog circuit element 1100 or, preferably, a digital circuit element that performs the same function. The two frequency synthesizers 1080 and 1090 provide reference signals to lockin amplifiers 1110 and 1120, respectively. In the case where more than two eigenmodes are to be employed, the number of lockin amplifiers will also be increased. As with other electronic components in this apparatus, the lockin amplifiers 1110 and 1120 can be made with analog circuitry or with digital circuitry or a hybrid of both. For a digital lockin amplifier, one interesting and attractive feature is that the lockin analysis can be performed on the same data stream for both eigenmodes. This implies that the same position sensitive detector and analog to digital converter can be used to extract information at the two distinct eigenmodes.
(27) The lockin amplifiers could also be replaced with rms measurement circuitry where the rms amplitude of the cantilever oscillation is used as a feedback signal.
(28) There are a number of variations in the
(29) In one method of using the
(30) Because higher eigenmodes have a significantly higher dynamic stiffness, the energy of these modes can be much larger than that of lower eigenmodes.
(31) The method may be used to operate the apparatus with one flexural mode experiencing a net attractive force and the other a net repulsive force, as well as operating with each mode experiencing the same net sign of force, attractive or repulsive. Using this method, with the cantilever experiencing attractive and repulsive interactions in different eigenmodes, may provide additional information about sample properties.
(32) One preferred technique for using the aforesaid method is as follows. First, excite the probe tip at or near a resonant frequency of the cantilever keeping the tip sufficiently far from the sample surface that it oscillates at the free amplitude A.sub.10 unaffected by the proximity of the cantilever to the sample surface and without making contact with the sample surface. At this stage, the cantilever is not touching the surface; it turns around before it interacts with significant repulsive forces.
(33) Second, reduce the relative distance in the Z direction between the base of the cantilever and the sample surface so that the amplitude of the probe tip A.sub.1 is affected by the proximity of the sample surface without the probe tip making contact with the sample surface. The phase p.sub.1 will be greater than p.sub.10, the free first eigenmode phase. This amplitude is maintained at an essentially constant value during scanning without the probe tip making contact with the sample surface by setting up a feedback loop that controls the distance between the base of the cantilever and the sample surface.
(34) Third, keeping the first eigenmode drive and surface controlling feedback loop with the same values, excite a second eigenmode of the cantilever at an amplitude A.sub.2. Increase A.sub.2 until the second eigenmode phase.sub.2 shows that the cantilever eigenmode is interacting with predominantly repulsive forces; that is, that p.sub.2 is less than p.sub.20, the free second eigenmode phase. This second amplitude A.sub.2 is not included in the feedback loop and is allowed to freely roam over a large range of values. In fact, it is typically better if variations in A.sub.2 can be as large as possible, ranging from 0 to A.sub.20, the free second eigenmode amplitude.
(35) Fourth, the feedback amplitude and phase, A.sub.1 and p.sub.1, respectively, as well as the carry along second eigenmode amplitude and phase, A.sub.2 and p.sub.2, respectively, should be measured and displayed.
(36) Alternatively, the drive amplitude and/or phase of the second frequency can be continually adjusted to maintain the second amplitude and/or phase at an essentially constant value. In this case, it is useful to display and record the drive amplitude and/or frequency required to maintain the second amplitude and/or phase at an essentially constant value.
(37) A second preferred technique for using the aforesaid method follows the first two steps of first preferred technique just described and then continues with the following two steps:
(38) Third, keeping the first eigenmode drive and surface controlling feedback loop with the same values, excite a second eigenmode (or harmonic) of the cantilever at an amplitude A.sub.2. Increase A.sub.2 until the second eigenmode phase p.sub.2 shows that the cantilever eigenmode is interacting with predominantly repulsive forces; that is, that p.sub.2 is less than p.sub.20, the free second eigenmode phase. At this point, the second eigenmode amplitude A.sub.2 should be adjusted so that the first eigenmode phase p.sub.1 becomes predominantly less than p.sub.10, the free first eigenmode phase. In this case, the adjustment of the second eigenmode amplitude A.sub.2 has induced the first eigenmode of the cantilever to interact with the surface in a repulsive manner. As with the first preferred technique, the second eigenmode amplitude A.sub.2 is not used in the tip-surface distance feedback loop and should be allowed range widely over many values.
(39) Fourth, the feedback amplitude and phase, A.sub.1 and p.sub.1, respectively, as well as the carry along second eigenmode amplitude and phase, A.sub.2 and p.sub.2, respectively, should be measured and displayed.
(40) Either of the preferred techniques just described could be performed in a second method of using the
(41) Relative changes in various parameters such as the amplitude and phase or in-phase and quadrature components of the cantilever at these different frequencies could also be used to extract information about the sample properties.
(42) A third preferred technique for using the aforesaid method provides an alternative for conventional operation in a repulsive mode that is where the tip is experiencing a net repulsive force. The conventional approach for so operating would be to use a large amplitude in combination with a lower setpoint, and a cantilever with a very sharp tip. Using this third preferred technique, however, the operator begins, just as with the first two techniques, by choosing an amplitude and setpoint for the fundamental eigenmode that is small enough to guarantee that the cantilever is experiencing attractive forces, that is, that the cantilever is in non-contact mode. As noted before, this operational mode can be identified by observing the phase of the cantilever oscillation. In the non-contact case, the phase shift is positive, implying that the resonant frequency has been lowered. With these conditions on the first eigenmode, the second eigenmode excitation can be introduced and the amplitude, drive frequency and, if applicable, set point chosen with the following considerations in mind:
(43) 1. Both eigenmodes are in the attractive mode, that is to say that the phase shift of both modes is positive, implying both eigenmode frequencies have been shifted negatively by the tip-sample interactions. Generally, this requires a small amplitude for the second eigenmode.
(44) 2. The fundamental eigenmode remains attractive while the second eigenmode is in a state where the tip-sample interactions cause it to be in both the attractive and the repulsive modes as it is positioned relative to the surface.
(45) 3. The fundamental eigenmode is in an attractive mode and the second eigenmode is in a repulsive mode.
(46) 4. In the absence of any second mode excitation, the first eigenmode is interacting with the surface in the attractive mode. After the second eigenmode is excited, the first eigenmode is in a repulsive mode. This change is induced by the addition of the second eigenmode energy. The second eigenmode is in a state where the tip-sample interactions cause it to be attractive and/or repulsive.
(47) 5. The first eigenmode is in a repulsive mode and the second mode is in a repulsive mode.
(48) The transition from attractive to repulsive mode in the first eigenmode, as induced by the second eigenmode excitation, is illustrated in
(49) More complicated feedback schemes can also be envisioned. For example, one of the eigenmode signals can be used for topographical feedback while the other signals could be used in other feedback loops. An example would be that A.sub.1 is used to control the tip-sample separation while a separate feedback loop was used to keep A.sub.2 at an essentially constant value rather than allowing it to range freely over many values. A similar feedback loop could be used to keep the phase of the second frequency drive p.sub.2 at a predetermined value with or without the feedback loop on A.sub.2 being implemented.
(50) As another example of yet another type of feedback that could be used, Q-control can also be used in connection with any of the techniques for using the aforesaid method. Using Q-control on any or all of the eigenmodes employed can enhance their sensitivity to the tip-sample forces and therefore mechanical or other properties of the sample. It can also be used to change the response time of the eigenmodes employed which may be advantageous for more rapidly imaging a sample. For example, the value of Q for one eigenmode could be increased and the value for another decreased. This may enhance the result of mixed attractive/repulsive mode imaging because it is generally easier to keep one eigenmode interacting with the sample in repulsive mode with a reduced Q-value or, conversely, in attractive mode with an enhanced Q-value. By reducing the Q-value of the lowest eigenmode and enhancing the Q-value of the next eigenmode, it is possible to encourage the mixed mode operation of the cantilever; the zeroth eigenmode will be in repulsive mode while the first eigenmode will more likely remain in attractive mode. Q-control can be implemented using analog, digital or hybrid analog-digital electronics. It can be accomplished using an integrated control system such as that in the Asylum Research Corporation MFP-3D Controller or by after-market modules such as the nanoAnalytics Q-box.
(51) In addition to driving the cantilever at or near more than one eigenmode, it is possible to also excite the cantilever at or near one or more harmonics and/or one or more eigenmodes. It has been known for some time that nonlinear interactions between the tip and the sample can transfer energy into cantilever harmonics. In some cases this energy transfer can be large but it is usually quite small, on the order of a percent of less of the energy in the eigenmode. Because of this, the amplitude of motion at a harmonic, even in the presence of significant nonlinear coupling is usually quite small. Using the methods described here, it is possible to enhance the contrast of these harmonics by directly driving the cantilever at the frequency of the harmonic. To further enhance the contrast of this imaging technique it is useful to adjust the phase of the higher frequency drive relative to that of the lower. This method improves the contrast of both conventional cantilevers and the specially engineered harmonic cantilevers described by Sahin et al and other researchers.
(52) On many samples, the results of imaging with the present invention are similar to, and in some cases superior to, the results of conventional phase imaging. However, while phase imaging often requires a judicious choice of setpoint and drive amplitude to maximize the phase contrast, the method of the present invention exhibits high contrast over a much wider range of imaging parameters. Moreover, the method also works in fluid and vacuum, as well as air and the higher flexural modes show unexpected and intriguing contrast in those environments, even on samples such as DNA and cells that have been imaged numerous times before using more conventional techniques.
(53) Although there is a wide range of operating parameters that yield interesting and useful data, there are situations where more careful tuning of the operational parameters will yield enhanced results. Some of these are discussed below. Of particular interest can be regions in set point and drive amplitude space where there is a transition from attractive to repulsive (or vice versa) interactions in one or more of the cantilever eigenmodes or harmonics.
(54) The superior results of imaging with the present invention may be seen from an inspection of the images. An example is shown in
(55) When an AFM is operated in conventional amplitude modulated (AM) AC mode with phase detection, the cantilever amplitude is maintained constant and used as a feedback signal. Accordingly, the values of the signal used in the loop are constrained not only by energy balance but also by the feedback loop itself. Furthermore, if the amplitude of the cantilever is constrained, the phase will also be constrained, subject to conditions discussed below. In conventional AC mode it is not unusual for the amplitude to vary by a very small amount, depending on the gains of the loop. This means that, even if there are mechanical properties of the sample that might lead to increased dissipation or a frequency shift of the cantilever, the z-feedback loop in part corrects for these changes and thus in this sense, avoids presenting them to the user.
(56) If the technique for using the present invention involves a mode that is excited but not used in the feedback loop, there will be no explicit constraints on the behavior of this mode. Instead it will range freely over many values of the amplitude and phase, constrained only by energy balance. That is to say, the energy that is used to excite the cantilever motion must be balanced by the energy lost to the tip-sample interactions and the intrinsic dissipation of the cantilever. This may explain the enhanced contrast we observe in images generated with the techniques of the present invention.
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(58) The present invention may also be used in apparatus that induce motion in the cantilever other than through a piezoelectric actuator. These could include direct electric driving of the cantilever (active cantilevers), magnetic actuation schemes, ultrasonic excitations, scanning Kelvin probe and electrostatic actuation schemes.
(59) Direct electric driving of the cantilever (active cantilevers) using the present invention has several advantages over conventional piezo force microscopy (PFM) where the cantilever is generally scanned over the sample in contact mode and the cantilever voltage is modulated in a manner to excite motion in the sample which in turn causes the cantilever to oscillate.
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(61) In one method of using the
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(63) The
(64) Another example of a preferred embodiment of an apparatus and method for using the present invention is from the field of ultrasonic force microscopy. In this embodiment, one or more eigenmodes are used for the z-feedback loop and one or more additional eigenmodes can be used to measure the high frequency properties of the sample. The high frequency carrier is amplitude modulated and either used to drive the sample directly or to drive it using the cantilever as a waveguide. The cantilever deflection provides a rectified measure of the sample response at the carrier frequency.
(65) Another group of embodiments for the present invention has similarities to the conventional force modulation technique described in the Background to the Invention and conventional PFM where the cantilever is scanned over the sample in contact mode and a varying voltage is applied to the cantilever. In general this group may be described as contact resonance embodiments. However, these embodiments, like the other embodiments already described, make use of multiple excitation signals.
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(67) In one method of using the
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(71) The piezo phase 19030 during a measurement made at location 19020 and the amplitude 19040 are plotted as a function of the applied DC bias voltage. The loops were made following Stephen Jesse et al, Rev. Sci. Inst. 77, 073702 (2006). Other loops were taken at the bright locations in image 19010, but are not shown in the Figure.
(72) DFRT PFM is very stable over time in contrast to single frequency techniques. This allows time dependent processes to be studied as is demonstrated by the sequence of images, 19010, 19050, 19060, 19070 and 19080 taken over the span of 1.5 hours. In these images, the written domains are clearly shrinking over time.
(73) In addition to DFRT PFM, another contact resonance embodiment for the present invention is a form of thermal modulated microscopy which may be referred to as Dual Frequency Resonance Tracking Ztherm Microscopy (DFRT ZT).
(74) LTA may be used to characterize materials, such as polymers, multilayer films and coatings, at micro and smaller scales. It is done with a conventional AFM equipped with a heating device that causes the temperature of the tip of a specialized cantilever probe to increase rapidly, e.g., to as high as 400 C., and until the onset of local melting. As the temperature of the tip increases, the small region of the sample under the tip usually expands, causing the cantilever to deflect upwards. The amount of deflection is a function of the tip temperature and measures localized thermal expansion. When the region of the sample under the tip warms enough to soften, this process can begin to reverse as the tip penetrates the still expanding sample.
(75) In addition to measuring deflection at fixed locations for LTA, the AFM used to measure deflection may also be used to image the sample to identify locations of interest and to image and measure features of the region under the tip after the LTA measurement is completed. The inset image in
(76) A number of improvements are necessary to make LTA more sensitive. Some of these improvements may also be useful to make DFRT ZT measurements more sensitive.
(77) Tip-Sample Bias Voltage Control. The most straightforward way of heating the cantilever tip of the specialized cantilever probe used in LTA is, as depicted in
(78) To mitigate this unwanted effect, a differential drive scheme, shown in
(79) As already noted, with the setup depicted in
(80) Calibration and Correction of Parasitic Bending. The specialized cantilever probes made for LTA are subject to unwanted bending and twisting effects as they are energized. Bending and twisting will appear to the AFM detector as a deflection of the cantilever and, unless measured and corrected for, will appear as a signal indistinguishable from deflection caused by tip-sample interactions. Even more deleterious, since the cantilever is bending, it will change the loading force on the sample. This parasitic effect typically varies from cantilever probe to cantilever probe and can change over time. If the sign of the bending is positive, the cantilever deflects away from the sample surface as its temperature rises, tending to reduce the loading force, while if the sign is negative, the cantilever is pressed into the surface.
(81) The inventors have devised techniques to calibrate and then correct the parasitic bending of the cantilever probe so that the load on the sample surface remains constant during heating cycles. The basic idea is to first calibrate the bending by ramping the temperature of the cantilever tip (that is ramping the voltage or current across the tip) while measuring deflection. This should be done over the temperature range of interest (and ideally a bit beyond) at a reference point above the sample. An example is shown by the circles in
(82) There are many ways to use this information to correct measurements. The current approach of the inventors is to fit the deflection data to a polynomial and then subtract the polynomial from the deflection data. The solid line bisecting the circles in
d.sub.c=d.sub.raw(c.sub.0+c.sub.1V+c.sub.2V.sup.2+c.sub.3V.sup.3+L)
where d.sub.c is the conditioned deflection voltage, d.sub.raw is the unprocessed deflection voltage measured by the photodetector electronics of the AFM, V are cantilever leg drive voltages and c.sub.i are the polynomial coefficients acquired from the reference curve fit. The pre-factor is typically unity unless it is desirable to otherwise specify. Some examples of the utility of non-unity values of the pre-factor are discussed below.
(83) The position of a heated cantilever tip relative to surface of the sample changes the heat transfer characteristics of the cantilever. Accordingly the compensation relationships of the above equation change with changes in proximity of the sample.
(84) Feedback on Cantilever Deflection. It has been suggested elsewhere that LTA measurements are more sensitive when a feedback loop is used to keep cantilever deflection constant and the measurement is based on movement of the z-position of the base of the cantilever probe required for this purpose rather than using cantilever deflection for the measurement. This suggestion is based on the claim that feedback obviates some of the effects of unwanted bending and twisting that give rise to the need for compensation. When feedback is used there are two useful signals: one from the piezo used to move the z-position of the base of the cantilever probe and the other from any sensor which verifies the movement. The latter signal is more reliable as piezo motion is susceptible to hysteresis and creep.
(85) Using a signal from a feedback loop used to keep cantilever deflection constant instead of signal from cantilever deflection itself has the advantage that the load on the sample is constant. This in turn allows smaller volumes of material to be probed.
(86) Threshold Triggering of Cantilever Probe Pull-off. Repeatability of thermal curves of the type shown in
(87) When the measured signal drops a defined amount below the recorded maximum value, the z-piezo is instructed to pull the cantilever probe away from the surface of the sample while it is still at a high temperature. An example is shown in
(88) The measurements depicted in
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(90) With the above four improvements necessary to make LTA more sensitive in mind, a meaningful comparison of LTA with DFRT ZT is now possible. In general DFRT ZT provides much higher sensitivity to thermo-mechanical changes at the cantilever tip-sample junction than does cantilever deflection detection, whether open loop or closed loop, used with LTA.
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(92) Preferably the two sinusoidal voltages produced by the frequency synthesizers 1080 and 1090 include one below the resonant frequency of the cantilever probe 1420 and the other above the resonant frequency. The two frequency synthesizers 1080 and 1090 also provide reference signals to lockin amplifiers 1110 and 1120, respectively. The motion of the cantilever probe 1420 relative to the frame of the microscope 1050 is measured with a detector 1060, which could be an optical lever or another method known to those versed in the art, and a signal from the detector 1060 is also provided to the lockin amplifiers 1110 and 1120. The cantilever chip 1030 is moved relative to the sample 1010 in order to maintain constant force by a scanning apparatus 1070, preferably a piezo/flexure combination, but other methods known to those versed in the art could also be used. The amplitude and phase of each frequency at which the cantilever probe 1420 is excited can be measured and used in a feedback loop calculated by the controller 1130 or simply reported to the user interface 1140 where it is displayed, stored and/or processed further in an off-line manner. Instead of, or in addition to, the amplitude and phase of the cantilever motion, the quadrature pairs, usually designated x and y, can be calculated and used in a manner similar to the amplitude and phase.
(93) As indicated above the AFM used to measure deflection at fixed locations for LTA measurements, may also be used to image the sample to identify locations of interest and to image and measure features of the region under the tip after the LTA measurement is completed. The DFRT ZT apparatus shown in
(94) For the purposes of this disclosure however the inventors have limited themselves to demonstrating that contact resonance techniques yields results that are superior to those yielded by LTA and with less damage to the sample. For the purposes of this demonstration, the inventors have limited themselves to the following conditions:
(95) The sample holder 2030 is modulated, and not the cantilever probe 1420 or cantilever chip 1030.
(96) The temperature of the cantilever tip is ramped at a frequency significantly below the frequency of modulation of the sample holder 2030.
(97) Using a differential drive scheme the potential at the cantilever tip is set at 0 volts to limit electrostatic forces between the tip and the sample 1010.
(98) Parasitic bending has been corrected with an appropriate correction
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(102) It may not be completely evident, but the z-sensor (closed loop measurement of deflection) curves shown in
(103) These conclusions relative to the superiority of contact resonance techniques are reinforced by the images shown in
(104) One important conclusion that can be drawn from
(105) In AC mode atomic force microscopy, relatively tiny tip-sample interactions can cause the motion of a cantilever probe oscillating at resonance to change, and with it the resonant frequency, phase and amplitude and deflection of the probe. Those changes of course are the basis of the inferences that make AC mode so useful. With contact resonance techniques, whether DFRT PFM or DFRT ZT, the contact between the tip and the sample also can cause the resonant frequency, phase and amplitude of the cantilever probe to change dramatically.
(106) The resonant frequency of the cantilever probe using contact resonance techniques depends on the properties of the contact, particularly the contact stiffness. Contact stiffness in turn is a function of the local mechanical properties of the tip and sample and the contact area. In general, all other mechanical properties being equal, increasing the contact stiffness by increasing the contact area, will increase the resonant frequency of the oscillating cantilever probe. This interdependence of the resonant properties of the oscillating cantilever probe and the contact area represents a significant shortcoming of contact resonance techniques. It results in topographical crosstalk that leads to significant interpretational issues. For example, it is difficult to know whether or not a phase or amplitude change of the probe is due to some sample property of interest or simply to a change in the contact area.
(107) The apparatus used in contact resonance techniques can also cause the resonant frequency, phase and amplitude of the cantilever probe to change unpredictably. Examples are discussed by Rabe et al., Rev. Sci. Instr. 67, 3281 (1996) and others since then. One of the most difficult issues is that the means for holding the sample and the cantilever probe involve mechanical devices with complicated, frequency dependent responses. Since these devices have their own resonances and damping, which are only rarely associated with the sample and tip interaction, they may cause artifacts in the data produced by the apparatus. For example, phase and amplitude shifts caused by the spurious instrumental resonances may freely mix with the resonance and amplitude shifts that originate with tip-sample interactions.
(108) It is advantageous to track more than two resonant frequencies as the probe scans over the surface when using contact resonance techniques. Increasing the number of frequencies tracked provides more information and makes it possible to over-constrain the determination of various physical properties. As is well known in the art, this is advantageous since multiple measurements will allow better determination of parameter values and provide an estimation of errors.
(109) Since the phase of the cantilever response is not a well behaved quantity for feedback purposes in DFRT PFM and DFRT ZT, we have developed other methods for measuring and/or tracking shifts in the resonant frequency of the probe. One method is based on making amplitude measurements at more than one frequency, both of which are at or near a resonant frequency.
(110) However, if the resonant frequency shifted to a lower value, the curve shifts to 15050 and the amplitudes at the measurement frequencies change, A.sub.1 15035 increasing and A.sub.2 15025 decreasing. If the resonant frequency were higher, the situation would reverse, that is the amplitude A.sub.1, at drive frequency f.sub.1 would decrease and A.sub.2 at f.sub.2 would increase.
(111) There are many methods to track the resonant frequency with information on the response at more than one frequency. One method with DFRT PFM and DFRT ZT is to define an error signal that is the difference between the amplitude at f.sub.1 and the amplitude at f.sub.2, that is A.sub.1 minus A.sub.2. A simpler example would be to run the feedback loop such that A.sub.1 minus A.sub.2=0, although other values could equally well be chosen. Alternatively both f.sub.1 and f.sub.2 could be adjusted so that the error signal, the difference in the amplitudes, is maintained. The average of these frequencies (or even simply one of them) provides the user with a measure of the contact resonance frequency and therefore the local contact stiffness. It is also possible to measure the damping and drive with the two values of amplitude. When the resonant frequency has been tracked properly, the peak amplitude is directly related to the amplitude on either side of resonance. One convenient way to monitor this is to simply look at the sum of the two amplitudes. This provides a better signal to noise measurement than does only one of the amplitude measurements. Other, more complicated feedback loops could also be used to track the resonant frequency. Examples include more complex functions of the measured amplitudes, phases (or equivalently, the in-phase and quadrature components), cantilever deflection or lateral and/or torsional motion.
(112) The values of the two amplitudes also allow conclusions to be drawn about damping and drive amplitudes. For example, in the case of constant damping, an increase in the sum of the two amplitudes indicates an increase in the drive amplitude while the difference indicates a shift in the resonant frequency.
(113) Finally, it is possible to modulate the drive amplitude and/or frequencies and/or phases of one or more of the frequencies. The response is used to decode the resonant frequency and, optionally, adjust it to follow changes induced by the tip-sample interactions.
(114)
(115) Another multiple frequency technique is depicted in
(116) As noted, the user often does not have independent knowledge about the drive or damping in contact resonance. Furthermore, models may be of limited help because they too require information not readily available. In the simple harmonic oscillator model for example, the drive amplitude A.sub.drive, drive phase .sub.drive, resonant frequency .sub.0 and quality factor Q (representative of the damping) will all vary as a function of the lateral tip position over the sample and may also vary in time depending on cantilever mounting schemes or other instrumental factors. In conventional PFM, only two time averaged quantities are measured, the amplitude and the phase of the cantilever (or equivalently, the in-phase and quadrature components). However, in dual or multiple frequency excitations, more measurements may be made, and this will allow additional parameters to be extracted. In the context of the SHO model, by measuring the response at two frequencies at or near a particular resonance, it is possible to extract four model parameters. When the two frequencies are on either side of resonance, as in the case of DFRT PFM or DFRT ZT for example, the difference in the amplitudes provides a measure of the resonant frequency, the sum of the amplitudes provides a measure of the drive amplitude and damping of the tip-sample interaction (or quality factor), the difference in the phase values provides a measure of the quality factor and the sum of the phases provides a measure of the tip-sample drive phase. Simply put, with measurements at two different frequencies, we measure four time averaged quantities, A.sub.1, A.sub.2, .sub.1, .sub.2 that allow us to solve for the four unknown parameters A.sub.drive, .sub.drive, .sub.0 and Q.
(117)
(118) This difficulty is surmounted by measuring the phase. Curves 18020, 18040 and 18060 are the phase curves corresponding to the amplitude curves 18010, 18030 and 18050 respectively. As with the amplitude measurements, the phase is measured at discrete frequency values, f.sub.1 and f.sub.2. The phase curve 18020 remains unchanged 18060 when the drive amplitude A.sub.drive increases from 0.06 nm to 0.09 nm. Note that the phase measurements 18022 and 18062 at f.sub.1 for the curves with the same quality factor are the same, as are the phase measurements 18024 and 18064 at f.sub.2. When the quality factor Q increases, the f.sub.1 phase 18042 decreases and the f.sub.2 phase 18044 increases. These changes clearly separate drive amplitude changes from Q value changes.
(119) In the case where the phase baseline does not change, it is possible to obtain the Q value from one of the phase measurements. However, as in the case of PFM and thermal modulated microscopy, the phase baseline may well change. In this case, it is advantageous to look at the difference 18070 in the two phase values. When the Q increases, this difference 18080 will also increase.
(120) If we increase the number of frequencies beyond two, other parameters can be evaluated such as the linearity of the response or the validity of the simple harmonic oscillator model
(121) Once the amplitude, phase, quadrature or in-phase component is measured at more than one frequency, there are numerous deductions that can be made about the mechanical response of the cantilever to various forces. These deductions can be made based around a model, such as the simple harmonic oscillator model or extended, continuous models of the cantilever or other sensor. The deductions can also be made using a purely phenomenological approach. One simple example in measuring passive mechanical properties is that an overall change in the integrated amplitude of the sensor response implies a change in the damping of the sensor. In contrast, a shift in the center of the amplitude in amplitude versus frequency measurements implies that the conservative interactions between the sensor and the sample have changed.
(122) This idea can be extended to more and more frequencies for a better estimate of the resonant behavior. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that this represents one manner of providing a spectrum of the sensor response over a certain frequency range. The spectral analysis can be either scalar or vector. This analysis has the advantage that the speed of these measurements is quite high with respect to other frequency dependent excitations.
(123) In measuring the frequency response of a sensor, it is not required to excite the sensor with a constant, continuous signal. Other alternatives such as so-called band excitation, pulsed excitations and others could be used. The only requirement is that the appropriate reference signal be supplied to the detection means.
(124)
(125) Scanning ion conductance microscopy, scanning electrochemical microscopy, scanning tunneling microscopy, scanning spreading resistance microscopy and current sensitive atomic force microscopy are all examples of localized transport measurements that make use of alternating signals, sometimes with an applied dc bias. Electrical force microscopy, Kelvin probe microscopy and scanning capacitance microscopy are other examples of measurement modes that make use of alternating signals, sometimes with an applied dc bias. These and other techniques known in the art can benefit greatly from excitation at more than one frequency. Furthermore, it can also be beneficial if excitation of a mechanical parameter at one or more frequencies is combined with electrical excitation at the same or other frequencies. The responses due to these various excitations can also be used in feedback loops, as is the case with Kelvin force microscopy where there is typically a feedback loop operating between a mechanical parameter of the cantilever dynamics and the tip-sample potential.
(126) The described embodiments of the invention are only considered to be preferred and illustrative of the inventive concept. The scope of the invention is not to be restricted to such embodiments. Various and numerous other arrangements may be devised by one skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.