posted on 2020-02-04, 13:35authored byYuya Teduka, Akira Sasahara, Hiroshi Onishi
Imaging nanometer-
or molecule-scale topography has been achieved
by dynamic atomic force microscopy (AFM) when a solid object of interest
is damaged by vacuum exposure or electron irradiation. Imaging in
a liquid offers a means to remove contaminations from the surface
scanned using the microscope tip when the object is soluble to the
surrounding liquid, typically water. In the present study, we attempted
to take topographic images of crystalline sucrose. A problem arose
due to the high solubility of this compound to water. Cantilever oscillation
could not be excited in the saturated, viscous aqueous solution. By
using n-hexanol instead of water, the solubility
in the solvent and thus viscosity of the solution were reduced sufficiently
to excite cantilever oscillation. Single-height steps and sucrose
molecules were recognized in the images and thereby recorded on the
(001)-oriented facets of sucrose crystals. Furthermore, two-dimensional
distribution of liquid-induced force pushing or pulling the tip was
mapped on planes perpendicular to the hexanol–sucrose interface.
Observed uneven force distributions indicated liquid hexanol structured
on the corrugated surface of sucrose. The viscosity tuning demonstrated
here, which is not limited to hexanol instead of water, extends the
range of liquid–solid interfaces to be probed by dynamic AFM.