Conductive atomic force microscopy

Conductive atomic force microscopy (C-AFM) is a variation of atomic force microscopy (AFM) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), which uses electrical current to construct the surface profile of the studied sample. The current is flowing through the metal-coated tip of the microscope and the conducting sample. Usual AFM topography, obtained by vibrating the tip, is acquired simultaneously with the current. This enables to correlate a spatial feature on the sample with its conductivity, and distinguishes C-AFM from STM where only current is recorded. A C-AFM microscope uses conventional silicon tips coated with a metal or metallic alloy, such as Pt-Ir alloy.[1]

The C-AFM can be operated in the imaging mode and spectroscopic mode.

Contents

Imaging mode

In the conventional imaging mode, vibrating tip is scanned over a small sample area (typically square micrometres); a negative voltage bias is applied to the sample, and the electrons tunneling from the sample to the tip are being collected. This polarity is chosen for several reasons:

Spectroscopic mode

In the spectroscopic mode, the tip is stationary, while the voltage is being swept. This allows recording conventional current–voltage characteristic from tiny areas of the sample, and thereby to extract information on the local electronic properties, such as local density of states.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Zhang, L.; T. Sakai, N. Sakuma, T. Ono, K. Nakayama (1999). "Nanostructural conductivity and surface-potential study of low-field-emission carbon films with conductive scanning probe microscopy". Applied Physics Letters 75 (22): 3527–3529. doi:10.1063/1.125377. 

See also