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Light microscopy photodiode

Figure 7.14 Experimental set-up for atomic force microscopy. The sample is mounted on a piezoelectric scanner and can be positioned with a precision better than 0.01 nm in the x, y, and z direction. The tip is mounted on a flexible arm the cantilever. When the tip is attracted or repelled by the sample, the deflection of the cantilever/tip assembly is measured as follows. A laser beam is focussed at the end of the cantilever and reflected to two photodiodes, numbered 1 and 2. If the tip bends towards the surface, photodiode 2 receives more light than 1, and the difference in intensity between 1 and 2 is a measure of the deflection of the cantilever and thus of the force between the sample and the tip. With four photodiodes, one can also measure the sideways deflection of the tip, for example at an edge on the sample surface. Figure 7.14 Experimental set-up for atomic force microscopy. The sample is mounted on a piezoelectric scanner and can be positioned with a precision better than 0.01 nm in the x, y, and z direction. The tip is mounted on a flexible arm the cantilever. When the tip is attracted or repelled by the sample, the deflection of the cantilever/tip assembly is measured as follows. A laser beam is focussed at the end of the cantilever and reflected to two photodiodes, numbered 1 and 2. If the tip bends towards the surface, photodiode 2 receives more light than 1, and the difference in intensity between 1 and 2 is a measure of the deflection of the cantilever and thus of the force between the sample and the tip. With four photodiodes, one can also measure the sideways deflection of the tip, for example at an edge on the sample surface.
In 1987 Mate et al. [468] used, for the first time, an atomic force microscope (AFM) to measure friction forces on the nanometer scale (review Ref. [469]). This technique became known as friction force microscopy (FFM) or lateral force microscopy (LFM). To measure friction forces with the AFM, the fast scan direction of the sample is chosen perpendicular to the direction of the cantilever. Friction between the tip and the sample causes the flexible cantilever to twist (Fig. 11.7). This torsion of the cantilever is measured by using a reflected beam of light and a position-sensitive detector in the form of a quadrant arrangement of photodiodes. This new method made it possible for the first time to study friction and lubrication on the nanometer scale. [Pg.230]


See other pages where Light microscopy photodiode is mentioned: [Pg.207]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.749]    [Pg.627]    [Pg.905]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.474]    [Pg.291]    [Pg.280]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.317]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.469]    [Pg.610]    [Pg.627]    [Pg.1144]    [Pg.634]   
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