The Nanoscale World

high molecular resolution with NC-AFM

rated by 0 users
Not Answered This post has 0 verified answers | 2 Replies | 1 Follower

Top 75 Contributor
13 Posts
Points 154
Luci posted on Thu, Sep 22 2011 10:48 AM

Does anyone know if it is possible to work with NC-AFM (amplitude modulated) in air to acquire high resolution of molecules such as C60, pentacene, etc...  I have seen  impressive results of high resolution molecular images but so far they were obtained in UHV at low temperatures. Is Bruker working to offer a machine with this imaging mode?

Thank you ,

Luci

  • | Post Points: 12

All Replies

replied on Thu, Sep 22 2011 1:00 PM

Hi Luci,

 

At this point Bruker does not offer a low temp, UHV system. We do offer a glove box if you are interested to work in clean enviroments as Thomas pointed out here: http://nanoscaleworld.bruker-axs.com/nanoscaleworld/forums/t/850.aspx

Even though the glovebox provides impressives specs it is of course not UHV. Electrochemical environemts can be made very clean and you may want to look into a few papers here if you are interested in high resolution work.

Bruker AFMs  operate in AM mode and you as the user have the choice to choose where on the resonance peak you want to sit, which amplitude you want to excite the cantilever at, and what setpoint you want to work with. So, its all yours to explore.

You may want to look at PeakForce tapping. Much easier to operate, way more reliable, and with the additional advantage of direct force control which allows you to extract mechanical information in a straightforward fashion. Check out the lastest paper in Nano letters from Felix Rico et al: Mechanical Mapping of Single Membrane Proteins at Submolecular Resolution.

  • | Post Points: 12
Top 75 Contributor
13 Posts
Points 154
Luci replied on Wed, Sep 28 2011 12:06 PM

Dear Stefan,

Thank you for the information.

Luci

  • | Post Points: 10
Page 1 of 1 (3 items) | RSS
Copyright (c) 2011 Bruker Instruments