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2002

Physics Faculty Publications and Presentations

Scanning probe microscopy -- Applications to nanotechnology

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Full-Text Articles in Physics

A Compact Method For Optical Induction Of Proximal Probe Heating And Elongation, Andres H. La Rosa, Hans D. Hallen Apr 2002

A Compact Method For Optical Induction Of Proximal Probe Heating And Elongation, Andres H. La Rosa, Hans D. Hallen

Physics Faculty Publications and Presentations

A tapered, metal-coated, optical fiber probe will elongate when heated by light input through a fiber. The induced motion can be used for data storage or nanostructuring of a surface. The elongation produced by this alignment-free system is measured with force feedback in a near-field scanning optical microscope (NSOM). The input light intensity controls the elongation magnitude, which ranges from a few nanometers to more than 100 nm. A 0.5-mW input energy yields ~20 nm of probe elongation. The elongation quantified here can create artifacts in any experiment using pulsed laser light with a NSOM or an atomic force microscope.