Publication | Closed Access
Direct Growth of Single Carbon Nanofiber onto Tip of Scanning Probe Microscopy Induced by Ion Irradiation
42
Citations
17
References
2006
Year
EngineeringMicroscopyChemical EngineeringCarbon-based MaterialElectron MicroscopyMicroscopy MethodNanometrologyDirect GrowthNanoscale ScienceSpatial ResolutionMaterials ScienceSingle Carbon NanofiberNanotechnologyNanomanufacturingIon IrradiationNanomaterialsMicrofabricationScanning Probe MicroscopyMaterials CharacterizationApplied PhysicsScanning Force MicroscopySingle Cnf
A novel method for the direct growth of a single carbon nanofiber (CNF) onto the tip of a commercially available scanning probe microscope (SPM) using Ar+-ion irradiation was demonstrated. This method was proposed on the basis of the experimental fact that the Ar+ ion bombardment of carbon coated substrates induced the formation of conical protrusions that possessed a single CNF at their tip. Commercially available Si SPM tips were coated with carbon and then were Ar+-ion bombarded at room temperature and at 200 °C. On the ion-bombarded SPM tips, single CNFs of about 30 nm in diameter grew. Their length, which was controlled by varying the sputtering duration, was typically 0.5–1.5 µm. Using the CNF-tipped probes thus prepared, clear atomic force microscope (AFM) images with a high spatial resolution were attained for Si-grating samples. No deterioration in the spatial resolution was detected after repeated scans for 90 min. Thus, the ion-irradiation method was concluded to be quite promising for the fabrication of practical CNF-tipped SPM probes.
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