Effect of Capillary Force on Friction Force Microscopy : A Scanning Hydrophilicity Microscope

The effect of capillary force due to surface water on friction force microscopy (FFM) was examined by comparing FFM images on oxidized Si surfaces partially covered with chemically bound hydrocarbon (HC) monolayers in vacuo and in an ambient atmosphere. It was found also from force-distance curves a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemistry letters 1996-07, Vol.25 (7), p.499-500
Hauptverfasser: Fujihira, Masamichi, Aoki, Daisuke, Okabe, Yoh, Takano, Hajime, Hokari, Hirofumi, Frommer, Jane, Nagatani, Yasunori, Sakai, Fumiki
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container_end_page 500
container_issue 7
container_start_page 499
container_title Chemistry letters
container_volume 25
creator Fujihira, Masamichi
Aoki, Daisuke
Okabe, Yoh
Takano, Hajime
Hokari, Hirofumi
Frommer, Jane
Nagatani, Yasunori
Sakai, Fumiki
description The effect of capillary force due to surface water on friction force microscopy (FFM) was examined by comparing FFM images on oxidized Si surfaces partially covered with chemically bound hydrocarbon (HC) monolayers in vacuo and in an ambient atmosphere. It was found also from force-distance curves and FFM under various relative humidities that adhesive and friction forces observed on the hydrophobic HC covered surface were almost independent of the humidity, while those on the hydrophilic bare oxidized Si surface increased with an increase in the humidity. The higher friction observed on the oxidized Si in the higher humidity was interpreted by the higher effective normal load due to the higher capillary force which originated from a surface water film formed by adsorption of water vapor in the humid air. The results suggest a novel scanning hydrophilicity microscope under a controlled humidity which can be used to map local hydrophilicities of a sample surface in a x-y plane.
doi_str_mv 10.1246/cl.1996.499
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title Effect of Capillary Force on Friction Force Microscopy : A Scanning Hydrophilicity Microscope
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