Chapter 6 – Forces 235
However, approximating the tip as a sphere of radius Rtip and assuming interactions with a
planar sample surface, we can integrate the incremental contributions from the sphere using
Equation 6.26 to give
(6.27)
U
zA R
z
LJ
H
rip
≈−
6
where AH is the Hamaker constant depending on the tip and sample electrical polarizability
and density. As Figure 6.6d illustrates, the combination of multiple independent poten
tial energy functions experienced by an AFM tip, which operate over different length scale
regimes, results in a highly nonlinear force–distance response curve.
6.5.3 AFM IMAGING MODES
During AFM imaging, the tip–cantilever force actuator can be used either in contact mode,
noncontact mode, tapping mode, or a relatively newly developed torsional mode. During con
tact mode imaging, the cantilever deflection is kept constant throughout as the tip is scanned
across the sample surface using fast feedback electronics from the photodiode detector to a
piezo actuator controlling the cantilever z position, to maintain a constant force on the tip
(and hence constant height above the surface, assuming the material properties of the sample
remain the same). Here, although the tip itself does not make direct contact as such with the
sample, it is placed in relatively close contact to it (typically less than the equilibrium atom
separation of ~0.2 nm) such that the overall force detected by the tip from the sample is in
the short-range repulsive force regime.
As Figure 6.6d suggests, the force, as the gradient of the potential energy curves, varies
dramatically with vertical displacement, with typical forces being in the range 10−6 to 10−9
N. This high sensitivity to vertical displacement allows potentially atomic-level resolution to
be obtained in contact mode. However, shearing forces at short distances from the sample are
high potentially resulting in sample distortion, in addition to sample damage from scraping of
soft sample features by the AFM tip during lateral scanning.
Although atomic-level resolution in z can in principle be obtained in contact mode, the
finite AFM tip radius of curvature results in a limit on the absolute maximum measurable
z displacement (i.e., height) between neighboring surface features. If, for example, similar
sharp surface features are separated by a characteristic displacement d in the lateral surface
plane, then the maximum height Δz, which an AFM tip of radius of curvature Rtip could
measure, is given from simple space constraints as
(6.28)
∆z
tip
d
R
≈
2
8
In contact mode imaging, the AFM tip can penetrate beyond water layers bound to the
surface to image the sample molecules directly, manifested in a greater spatial resolution.
However, the finite sharpness of the AFM tip itself means that some sample surface features
will be inaccessible with a resultant tip broadening convolution artifact (see Worked Case
Example 6.2). The AFM tip experiences a lateral force from a stiff object on the surface when
the AFM tip is pushed down vertically during imaging. If the half angle of the tip’s triangular
cross-section is θ, then simple geometrical considerations indicate that the tip broadening
coefficient κ, defined as the ratio of the apparent measured width r′ of the stiff object (mod
eled as a sphere with a circular cross-section of radius r), satisfies
(6.29)
κ
θ
θ
=
=
+
′r
r
tan
sec