APS March Meeting 2015
Volume 60, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 2–6, 2015;
San Antonio, Texas
Session A21: Focus Session: Advances in Scanned Probe Microscopy I: Novel Approaches and Ultrasenstive Detection
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Monday, March 2, 2015
Room: 201
Sponsoring
Unit:
GIMS
Chair: Nikolai Zhitenev, National Institute of Standards and Technology
Abstract ID: BAPS.2015.MAR.A21.7
Abstract: A21.00007 : Absorption Spectroscopy and Imaging from the Visible through Mid-IR with 20 nm Resolution Using AFM probes
9:12 AM–9:48 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Andrea Centrone
(NIST)
Correlated nanoscale composition and optical property maps are important to
engineer nanomaterials in applications ranging from photovoltaics to sensing
and therapeutics. Wavelengths ($\lambda $s) from the visible to near-IR
probe electronic transitions in materials, providing information regarding
band gap and defects while light in mid-IR probes vibrational transitions
and provide chemical composition. However, light diffraction limits the
lateral resolution of conventional micro-spectroscopic techniques to
approximately $\lambda $/2, which is insufficient to image nanomaterials.
Additionally, the $\lambda $-dependent resolution impedes direct comparison
of spectral maps from different spectral ranges.
Photo Thermal Induced Resonance (PTIR) is a novel technique that circumvents
light diffraction by employing an AFM tip as a local detector for measuring
light absorption with $\lambda $-independent nanoscale resolution. Our PTIR
setup combines an AFM microscope with three lasers providing $\lambda
$-tunability from 500 nm to 16000 nm continuously. The AFM tip transduces
locally the sample thermal expansion induced by light absorption into large
cantilever oscillations. Local absorption spectra (electronic or
vibrational) and maps are obtained recording the amplitude of the tip
deflection as a function of $\lambda $ and position, respectively.
The working principles of the PTIR technique will be described first, and
nano-patterned polymer samples will be used to evaluate its lateral
resolution, sensitivity and linearity. Results show that the PTIR signal
intensity is proportional to the local absorbed energy suggesting
applicability of this technique for quantitative chemical analysis at
nanoscale, at least for thin (less than 1000 nm thick) samples.
Additionally, a $\lambda $-independent resolution as high as 20 nm is
demonstrated across the whole spectral range.
In the second part of the talk, PTIR will be applied to image the dark
plasmonic resonance of gold Asymmetric Split Ring Resonators (A-SRRs) in the
mid-IR. Additionally, the chemically-specific PTIR signal will be used to
map the near-field absorption enhancement of PMMA coated A-SRRs, revealing
hot-spots with enhancement factors up to $\approx $ 30. PTIR has broad
applicability; recent examples from my lab include the characterization of
chemically heterogeneous domains in metal-organic frameworks crystals and
solar cells materials.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2015.MAR.A21.7