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Capillary and van der Waals interactions on CaF(2) crystals from amplitude modulation AFM force reconstruction profiles under ambient conditions

There has been much interest in the past two decades to produce experimental force profiles characteristic of the interaction between nanoscale objects or a nanoscale object and a plane. Arguably, the advent of the atomic force microscope AFM was instrumental in driving such efforts because, in prin...

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Autores principales: Calò, Annalisa, Robles, Oriol Vidal, Santos, Sergio, Verdaguer, Albert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Beilstein-Institut 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4419597/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25977852
http://dx.doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.6.84
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author Calò, Annalisa
Robles, Oriol Vidal
Santos, Sergio
Verdaguer, Albert
author_facet Calò, Annalisa
Robles, Oriol Vidal
Santos, Sergio
Verdaguer, Albert
author_sort Calò, Annalisa
collection PubMed
description There has been much interest in the past two decades to produce experimental force profiles characteristic of the interaction between nanoscale objects or a nanoscale object and a plane. Arguably, the advent of the atomic force microscope AFM was instrumental in driving such efforts because, in principle, force profiles could be recovered directly. Nevertheless, it has taken years before techniques have developed enough as to recover the attractive part of the force with relatively low noise and without missing information on critical ranges, particularly under ambient conditions where capillary interactions are believed to dominate. Thus a systematic study of the different profiles that may arise in such situations is still lacking. Here we employ the surfaces of CaF(2), on which nanoscale water films form, to report on the range and force profiles that might originate by dynamic capillary interactions occurring between an AFM tip and nanoscale water patches. Three types of force profiles were observed under ambient conditions. One in which the force decay resembles the well-known inverse-square law typical of van der Waals interactions during the first 0.5–1 nm of decay, a second one in which the force decays almost linearly, in relatively good agreement with capillary force predicted by the constant chemical potential approximation, and a third one in which the attractive force is almost constant, i.e., forms a plateau, up to 3–4 nm above the surface when the formation of a capillary neck dominates the tip–sample interaction.
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spelling pubmed-44195972015-05-14 Capillary and van der Waals interactions on CaF(2) crystals from amplitude modulation AFM force reconstruction profiles under ambient conditions Calò, Annalisa Robles, Oriol Vidal Santos, Sergio Verdaguer, Albert Beilstein J Nanotechnol Full Research Paper There has been much interest in the past two decades to produce experimental force profiles characteristic of the interaction between nanoscale objects or a nanoscale object and a plane. Arguably, the advent of the atomic force microscope AFM was instrumental in driving such efforts because, in principle, force profiles could be recovered directly. Nevertheless, it has taken years before techniques have developed enough as to recover the attractive part of the force with relatively low noise and without missing information on critical ranges, particularly under ambient conditions where capillary interactions are believed to dominate. Thus a systematic study of the different profiles that may arise in such situations is still lacking. Here we employ the surfaces of CaF(2), on which nanoscale water films form, to report on the range and force profiles that might originate by dynamic capillary interactions occurring between an AFM tip and nanoscale water patches. Three types of force profiles were observed under ambient conditions. One in which the force decay resembles the well-known inverse-square law typical of van der Waals interactions during the first 0.5–1 nm of decay, a second one in which the force decays almost linearly, in relatively good agreement with capillary force predicted by the constant chemical potential approximation, and a third one in which the attractive force is almost constant, i.e., forms a plateau, up to 3–4 nm above the surface when the formation of a capillary neck dominates the tip–sample interaction. Beilstein-Institut 2015-03-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4419597/ /pubmed/25977852 http://dx.doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.6.84 Text en Copyright © 2015, Calò et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0https://www.beilstein-journals.org/bjnano/termsThis is an Open Access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The license is subject to the Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology terms and conditions: (https://www.beilstein-journals.org/bjnano/terms)
spellingShingle Full Research Paper
Calò, Annalisa
Robles, Oriol Vidal
Santos, Sergio
Verdaguer, Albert
Capillary and van der Waals interactions on CaF(2) crystals from amplitude modulation AFM force reconstruction profiles under ambient conditions
title Capillary and van der Waals interactions on CaF(2) crystals from amplitude modulation AFM force reconstruction profiles under ambient conditions
title_full Capillary and van der Waals interactions on CaF(2) crystals from amplitude modulation AFM force reconstruction profiles under ambient conditions
title_fullStr Capillary and van der Waals interactions on CaF(2) crystals from amplitude modulation AFM force reconstruction profiles under ambient conditions
title_full_unstemmed Capillary and van der Waals interactions on CaF(2) crystals from amplitude modulation AFM force reconstruction profiles under ambient conditions
title_short Capillary and van der Waals interactions on CaF(2) crystals from amplitude modulation AFM force reconstruction profiles under ambient conditions
title_sort capillary and van der waals interactions on caf(2) crystals from amplitude modulation afm force reconstruction profiles under ambient conditions
topic Full Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4419597/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25977852
http://dx.doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.6.84
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AT santossergio capillaryandvanderwaalsinteractionsoncaf2crystalsfromamplitudemodulationafmforcereconstructionprofilesunderambientconditions
AT verdagueralbert capillaryandvanderwaalsinteractionsoncaf2crystalsfromamplitudemodulationafmforcereconstructionprofilesunderambientconditions