Publication | Open Access
Thin Film Analysis by Nanomechanical Infrared Spectroscopy
17
Citations
61
References
2019
Year
Thin Film CharacterizationEngineeringThin Film AnalysisOptical CharacterizationOptical PropertiesThin Film ProcessingMaterials ScienceNanotechnologyInfrared SpectroscopyPolymer Thin FilmsAttenuated Total ReflectionInfrared SensorSpectroscopyMaterials CharacterizationApplied PhysicsPolymer SciencePolymer CharacterizationThin FilmsNam-ir Setup
There is a fundamental need for techniques for thin film characterization. The current options for obtaining infrared (IR) spectra typically suffer from low signal-to-noise-ratios (SNRs) for sample thicknesses confined to a few nanometers. We present nanomechanical infrared spectroscopy (NAM-IR), which enables the measurement of a complete infrared fingerprint of a polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) layer as thin as 20 nm with an SNR of 307. Based on the characterization of the given NAM-IR setup, a minimum film thickness of only 160 pm of PVP can be analyzed with an SNR of 2. Compared to a conventional attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) system, NAM-IR yields an SNR that is 43 times larger for a 20 nm-thick PVP layer and requires only a fraction of the acquisition time. These results pave the way for NAM-IR as a highly sensitive, fast, and practical tool for IR analysis of polymer thin films.
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