An adaptive multi-loop mode (AMLM) imaging of atomic force microscope (AFM) is proposed. Due to its superior image quality and less sample disturbances, tapping mode (TM) imaging is currently the de facto most widely used imaging technique. However, the speed of TM-imaging is substantially limited, and becoming the major bottleneck of this technique. The proposed AMLM-imaging overcomes the limits of TM-imaging by utilizing control techniques to substantially increase the speed of TM-imaging while preserving the advantages of TM-imaging. The AMLM-imaging is tested and demonstrated through imaging a PtBA sample in experiments, and the experiment results demonstrated that the image quality over large-size imaging (50 μm by 25 μm) achieved at the scan rate of 25 Hz is at the same level of that when using TM-imaging at 1 Hz, while the probe-sample interaction force is smaller than that of the TM-imaging at 2.5 Hz.
- Dynamic Systems and Control Division
Adaptive Multi-Loop Mode Atomic Force Microscope Imaging Available to Purchase
Ren, J, Zou, Q, Li, B, & Lin, Z. "Adaptive Multi-Loop Mode Atomic Force Microscope Imaging." Proceedings of the ASME 2014 Dynamic Systems and Control Conference. Volume 1: Active Control of Aerospace Structure; Motion Control; Aerospace Control; Assistive Robotic Systems; Bio-Inspired Systems; Biomedical/Bioengineering Applications; Building Energy Systems; Condition Based Monitoring; Control Design for Drilling Automation; Control of Ground Vehicles, Manipulators, Mechatronic Systems; Controls for Manufacturing; Distributed Control; Dynamic Modeling for Vehicle Systems; Dynamics and Control of Mobile and Locomotion Robots; Electrochemical Energy Systems. San Antonio, Texas, USA. October 22–24, 2014. V001T12A002. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/DSCC2014-6234
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