Atomistic simulations of fluid structure and solvation forces in atomic force microscopy |
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Authors: | David L. Patrick R. M. Lynden-Bell |
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Affiliation: | a University of Cambridge, Department of Chemistry, Lensfield Road, Cambridge CB2 1EW, UK b Atomistic Stimulation Group, School of Mathematics and Physics, The Queen's University, Belfast BT7 1NN, UK |
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Abstract: | We describe results of atomistic molecular dynamics simulations modelling an atomic force microscope (AFM) tip immersed in a fluid. Both the tip and the surface are modelled by rigid arrays of atoms. The tip is pyramidal and the surface is the (100) face of a fcc crystal. The focus is on the solvation forces acting on the tip and on the surface and their relation to the structural and dynamic properties of the fluid. Fluid particles in the neighborhood of the tip-surface junction are found to be highly ordered compared to the bulk, as shown by localized variations in the average fluid density. The atomistic nature of the model gives rise to several effects related to the discrete sizes of the fluid, tip, and surface particles which are not observed in continuum-based theories. A number of simulated force-distance curves are presented, along with an analysis of the effect of changing fluid particle size, tip (lateral) position, tip shape, and the lyocompatability of the tip and surface materials. The atomic-scale distribution of fluid-surface forces is examined for various positions of the tip, and the extent to which the fluid can act as a “cushion” by increasing the effective area of the tip-surface interaction is studied. The effect of a fluid on AFM imaging is investigated by generating “fluid images”, which are shown to be comparable in magnitude to the direct tip-surface interaction in the noncontact mode. We compare images generated by defective and defect-free surfaces, and analyse the fluid-tip forces acting in a lateral direction. An image formed from fluid forces acting in the direction of the surface normal does not show the presence of a vacancy, but an image formed from lateral fluid forces does. |
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Keywords: | Atomic force microscopy Atomistic dynamics Computer simulations Molecular dynamics Scanning tunneling microscopy Solid-liquid interfaces |
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