Photonics Online - December 2011
Improving Nano-Scale Imaging Of Integrated Micro-Raman/AFM Systems Using Negative-Stiffness Vibration Isolation
Negative-stiffness vibration isolators can easily support the heavy weight of a combined AFM/micro-Raman system, and isolate it from low frequency vibrations more effectively than high-performance air tables or active isolation systems.
The need for precise vibration isolation with scanning probe microscopy (SPM) and near-field scanning optical microscopy (NSOM) systems is becoming more critical as resolutions continue to bridge from micro to nano. Whether used in academic labs or commercial facilities, SPM and NSOM systems are extremely susceptible to vibrations from the environment. When measuring a very few angstroms or nanometers of displacement, an absolutely stable surface must be established for the instrument. Any vibration coupled into the mechanical structure of the instrument will cause vertical and/or horizontal noise and bring about a reduction in the ability to measure high resolution features - the vertical axis being the most sensitive for SPMs, but they can also be quite sensitive to vibrations in the horizontal axis.
Traditionally, bungee cords and high-performance
air tables have been the vibration isolators most
used for SPM and NSOM work. The ubiquitous passive-system
air tables, adequate until a decade ago, are now being
seriously challenged by the need for more refined
imaging requirements. Bench top air systems provide
limited isolation vertically and very little isolation
horizontally. Also at a disadvantage are the active
isolation systems, known as electronic force cancellation,
that use electronics to sense the motion and then
put in equal amounts of motion electronically to compensate
and cancel out the motion. Active systems are somewhat
adequate for applications with lasers and optics,
as they can start isolating as low as 0.7 Hz, but
because they run on electricity they can be negatively
influenced by problems of electronic dysfunction and
power modulations, which can interrupt scanning.
Lately, the introduction of integrated microscopy
systems employing multiple microscopes is enabling
more complex optical measurements, but these systems
are also much heavier, and there has been little vibration
isolation technology available for such heavy instrumentation.
Air tables, which have been liberally used for optics
applications, are not ideal for these nano-scale resolution
systems because of their inability to effectively
isolate vibrations below 20 Hz. Nor can active systems
be used with these newer combination systems because
of their inability to handle heavy instrumentation.
But now, negative-stiffness mechanism (NSM) vibration isolation is quickly becoming the choice for SPM and NSOM systems. This includes applications using atomic force microscopy (AFM) integrated with micro-Raman spectroscopy, where negative-stiffness vibration isolation is particularly well adapted. In fact, it is the application of negative-stiffness isolation that has enabled AFMs to be truly integrated with micro-Raman into one combined system. Negative-stiffness isolators can handle the heavy weight of the combined AFM/micro-Raman system, as well as isolate the equipment from low frequency vibrations, a critical set of factors that high-performance air tables and active systems cannot achieve.
AFM with Micro-Raman Integrated
The integration of AFM with micro-Raman enables a sizable
improvement in data correlation between the two techniques
and expanded Raman measurement and resolution capabilities.
Micro-Raman is a spectroscopic NSOM technique used in condensed
matter physics and chemistry to study vibrational, rotational,
and other low-frequency modes in a system. It relies on
scattering of monochromatic light, usually from a laser
in the visible, near infrared or near ultraviolet range.
The laser light interacts with phonons or other excitations
in the system, resulting in the energy of the laser photons
being shifted up or down. The shift in energy gives information
about the phonon modes in the system.
Scanning samples in a micro-Raman system, however, suffers
from several problems. As a sample is scanned, even a very
flat sample, it is hard to keep the distance of the lens
to the sample constant. Thus, as one goes from pixel to
pixel under the lens of a Raman, a mixture of sample and
air is sampled in the voxel (volumetric picture element)
that is illuminated. This causes intensity variations in
the Raman that are unrelated to the chemical composition
of the sample and are artifactual. This is even more pronounced
with rough samples and standard methods of auto-focus are
simply not accurate enough for a whole host of problems
that are being investigated today. Additionally, the point
spread function, which determines the resolution of the
Raman image, is significantly broader where there are contributions
from the out-of-focus light and this reduces resolution.
The atomic force microscope, being a very high-resolution
type of scanning probe microscope, has demonstrated resolution
of fractions of a nanometer, making it one of the foremost
tools for imaging, measuring and manipulating matter at
the nano-scale. The information is gathered by "feeling"
the surface with a mechanical probe. Piezoelectric elements
that facilitate tiny but accurate and precise movements
on electronic command enable the very precise scanning.
The AFM consists of a micro-scale cantilever with a sharp
tip (probe) at its end that is used to scan the specimen
surface. The cantilever is typically silicon or silicon
nitride with a tip radius of curvature on the order of nanometers.
When the tip is brought into proximity of a sample surface,
forces between the tip and the sample lead to a deflection
of the cantilever. Resultant characteristics, such as mechanical,
electrostatic, magnetic, chemical and other forces are then
measured by the AFM using, typically, a laser spot reflected
from the top surface of the cantilever into an array of
photodiodes.
Most systems employing AFM in concert
with Raman perform separately, executing either an
AFM scan or a Raman scan independently. The recently
developed direct integration of Raman spectroscopy
with AFM technique, however, has opened the door to
significantly improved technique and sample analyses.
Micro-Raman is a micro-technique, but when AFM is
added, it becomes a nano-technique. It allows the
AFM structural data to be recorded online and improves
the resolution of the Raman information when the nanometric
feedback of the system adjusts, with unprecedented
precision, the position of each pixel of the sample
relative to the lens. Also the small movements of
the AFM stage provide oversampling which is a well-known
technique for resolution improvement.
One integrated AFM-Raman system developed by Nanonics
Imaging Ltd. in association with major Raman manufacturers
such as Renishaw plc, Horiba JY and others provides
simultaneous and, very importantly, on-line data from
both modalities. This advantage addresses critical
problems in Raman including resolution and intensity
comparisons in Raman images while permitting on-line
functional characterization such as thermal conductivity,
elasticity and adhesion, electrical and other properties.
It also provides for new avenues of improved resolution
including AFM functioning without optical obstruction,
parallel recording with Raman in a wide variety of
scanned probe imaging modalities enabling direct and
simultaneous image comparison and analysis, and high-resolution
Raman mapping.
"Until recently, Raman scattering has remained separate
and removed from the proliferation of insights that the
scanned probe microscopies can give," says Aaron Lewis,
President of Nanonics Imaging, which was the first to see
the potential of such integration. "Without this integration
of the systems, investigating a sample with scanned probe
microscopy required removing the sample from the micro-Raman
spectrometer. This meant that the exact region that was
being interrogated by Raman could not be effectively correlated
with the chosen SPM imaging technique."
"Another aspect of optical integration is that SPMs
can measure forces, but they cannot measure distribution
of light in micro-lasers, silicon-based wave guides, fluorescently
stained biological materials, etc.," explains Lewis.
"For example, there are many important advances occurring
in the application of photonics to silicon structures and
plasmonic metals. In the past, these photonic structures
were in the micrometer range, now they are nanometric."
The Nanonics platform can be used for structural and photonic
characterization, as well as the structural and chemical
characterization that is available with AFM and Raman integration.
For these applications, Nanonics Imaging is the innovator
of AFM and NSOM systems, including dual tip/sample scanning
AFM systems, the industry's first NSOM-AFM cryogenic systems,
integrated Raman-AFM systems, multi-probe AFM and SEM-AFM
systems. The company also holds patents to the largest range
of unique nano-probes. These probes form a NanoToolKitTM
for its unique characterization platforms with a variety
of tasks, such as for nano-photonics, plasmonics, nano-chemical
imaging and even nano-chemical deposition based on its singular
NanoFountainPen technology. The company is focused
on full integration of AFM technology with optics, chemical
imaging and other analytical tools.
The Nanonics MultiView AFM-NSOM microscope, with its free
optical axis on a standard micro-Raman, now makes it possible
to truly integrate the separate worlds of Raman and AFM/NSOM
nanocharacterization, which has led to a new era in high-resolution
Raman spectroscopy.
Facilitating this integration is not only the geometry of
the AFM/NSOM platform but also a new generation of AFM glass
probes that have very unique characteristics - such as hollow
glass probes with cantilevered nano-pippets for material
deposition, probes with glass surrounding a single nano-wire
in the middle for ultrasensitive electrical measurements,
or dual wire glass probes for thermal conductivity and thermocouple
measurements. Glass probes are ideal for Raman integration
because of their transparency to laser light and no Raman
background. They also expand outward allowing unprecedented
correlation of Raman and AFM, also permitting multiple probes
to be brought easily together, which is very difficult with
a standard AFM.
Negative-Stiffness Vibration Isolation - Enabling
AFM and Micro-Raman to Function as an Integrated Platform
Underlying this pioneering integration AFM with micro-Raman
is negative-stiffness vibration isolation, developed
my Minus K Technology, Inc. What negative-stiffness
isolators provide is really quite unique to SPM-Raman
and other NSOM systems. In particular, improved transmissibility
of a negative-stiffness isolator - that is the vibrations
that transmit through the isolator relative to the
input floor vibrations. Transmissibility with negative-stiffness
is substantially improved over air systems and over
active isolation systems.
Negative-stiffness isolators employ a unique - and
completely mechanical - concept in low-frequency vibration
isolation. Vertical-motion isolation is provided by
a stiff spring that supports a weight load, combined
with a Negative-Stiffness mechanism. The net vertical
stiffness is made very low without affecting the static
load-supporting capability of the spring. Beam-columns
connected in series with the vertical-motion isolator
provide horizontal-motion isolation. The horizontal
stiffness of the beam-columns is reduced by the "beam-column"
effect (A beam-column behaves as a spring combined
with a negative-stiffness mechanism). The result is
a compact passive isolator capable of very low vertical
and horizontal natural frequencies and very high internal
structural frequencies. The isolators (adjusted to
1/2 Hz) achieve 93% isolation efficiency at 2 Hz;
99% at 5 Hz; and 99.7% at 10 Hz.
"Before negative-stiffness vibration isolation
was employed, AFM used in conjunction with micro-Raman
systems could not maintain adequate imaging integrity
while measuring at the nano-scale level," explains
Lewis. "Vibration isolation is absolutely necessary
for the system's successful performance, and negative-stiffness
isolation has enabled AFM and micro-Raman to function
as a truly integrated platform."
About Minus K Technology, Inc.
Minus K® Technology, Inc. was founded in 1993 to develop,
manufacture and market state-of-the-art vibration isolation
products based on the company's patented negative-stiffness-mechanism
technology. Minus K products are used in a broad spectrum
of applications including nanotechnology, biological sciences,
semiconductors, materials research, zero-g simulation of
spacecraft, and high-end audio. The company is an OEM supplier
to leading manufactures of scanning probe microscopes, micro-hardness
testers and other vibration-sensitive instruments and equipment.
Minus K customers include private companies and more than
200 leading universities and government laboratories in
35 countries.
Dr. David L. Platus is the inventor of negative-stiffness
mechanism vibration isolation systems, and President and
Founder of Minus K Technology, Inc. (www.minusk.com). He
earned a B.S. and a Ph.D. in Engineering from UCLA, and
a diploma from the Oak Ridge School of (Nuclear) Reactor
Technology. Prior to founding Minus K Technology he worked
in the nuclear, aerospace and defense industries conducting
and directing analysis and design projects in structural-mechanical
systems. He became an independent consultant in 1988. Dr.
Platus holds over 20 patents related to shock and vibration
isolation.
For more information on negative-stiffness vibration isolation
please contact Steve Varma, Minus K Technology, Inc.; 460
South Hindry Ave., Unit C, Inglewood, CA 90301; Phone 310-348-9656;
Fax 310-348-9638; email sales@minusk.com; www.minusk.com.
To find out about Nanonics Imaging Ltd., contact Aaron Lewis,
President; Manhat Technology Park, Malcha, Jerusalem, Israel
91487; Phone +972-2-678-9573, Fax +972-2-648-0827, USA Toll
Free 1-866-220-6828; email info@nanonics.co.il; www.nanonics.co.il.
*****************
Jim McMahon writes on instrumentation technology.
His feature stories have appeared in hundreds of industrial
and high-tech publications throughout the world and are
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at jim.mcmahon@zebracom.net.
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