Nanoscale measurement of the Power Spectral Density of surface roughness: a difficult experimental challenge and how to solve it
In the present work we show that the correct determination of surface morphology using Scanning Force Microscopy (SFM) imaging and Power Spectral Density (PSD) analysis of the surface roughness is an extremely demanding task that is easily affected by experimental parameters such as scan speed and f...
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Zusammenfassung: | In the present work we show that the correct determination of surface
morphology using Scanning Force Microscopy (SFM) imaging and Power Spectral
Density (PSD) analysis of the surface roughness is an extremely demanding task
that is easily affected by experimental parameters such as scan speed and
feedback parameters. We present examples were the measured topography data is
significantly influenced by the feedback response of the SFM system and the PSD
curves calculated from this experimental data do not correspond to that of the
true topography. Instead, either features are "lost" due to low pass filtering
or features are "created" due to oscillation of the feedback loop. In order to
overcome these serious problems we show that the interaction signal (error
signal) can be used not only to quantitatively control but also to
significantly improve the quality of the topography raw data used for the PSD
analysis. In particular, the calibrated error signal image can be used in
combination with the topography image in order to obtain a correct
representation of surface morphology ("true" topographic image). From this
"true" topographic image a faithful determination of the PSD of surface
morphology is possible. The corresponding PSD curve is not affected by the
fine-tuning of feedback parameters, and allows for much faster image
acquisition speeds without loss information in the PSD curve. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1104.4819 |