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Thermal tune method advice.

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Marko posted on Wed, Jul 7 2010 3:03 AM

Hi All,

I am seeking advise on using the thermal tune method to derive the 'k' value for soft cantilevers ( res freq about 15kHz ).

At the moment, to do this, I operate a D3100 as follows:

1. In contact mode, approach a hard sample ( metal sample holder ) and acquire a force Vs distance curve to calibrate the piezo sensitivity.

2. return to image mode and set the gains to zero and the scan area to zero.

3. Using stepper motor, raise the tip well above sample ( at least 40 microns )

4. Set the channel 1 to record deflection, all other channels turned off,  the scan rate to 61Hz and resolution to 512 pixels. This yields a maximum sampling rate of about 62kHz.

5. Acquire an image or of the deflection.

6. Execute a power density spectrum of the image in the x direction

7. Move the cursors so that they enclose the resonant peak only and record the value ( this should be equal to the average vibrational amplitude in nanometers squared ).

8 Apply this value to the thermal tune equation.

 

Does this make sense and has any one else done this? The numbers seem to make sense but I would like confirmation.

Kind regards,

Marko

 

 

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Answered (Verified) Verified Answer

Answered (Verified) replied on Thu, Jul 8 2010 5:10 PM
Verified by Marko

Hi Marko,

Your way of obtaining the thermal spectrum of the lever is perfectly fine. That is basically the way we do it except that we don't scan (at zero nm scansize). Just keep in mind that your pixel/sampling frequency is 62 kHz but your bandwidth is only 62 kHz/2 = 31 kHz.

Stefan

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