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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A method for generating a topographical image of a surface of a sample
with a resolution better than 100 nm, comprising the steps of:
moving a sharp point (5) which is fixed to one end of a spring-like
cantilever (7) toward the surface of the sample (4) to be inspected to a
distance where the forces occurring between the atoms at the apex of said
point (5) and on the sample's surface are larger than 10.sup.-20 N and the
resulting force deflects said cantilever (7);
detecting the deflection of said cantilever (7) by means of a tunnel tip
(8) disposed adjacent said cantilever (7);
maintaining the tunnel current flowing across the tunnel gap between said
cantilever (7) and said tunnel tip (8) at a substantially constant
preselected value by using any detected variations of the tunnel current
from said preselected value to generate a correction signal;
using said correction signal to maintain the point-to-sample distance
substantially constant; and
moving the sample relative to said point (5).
2. The method in accordance with claim 1, comprising the further steps of:
generating a series of successive position signals (via 33), each
indicative of the then current position of the point (5) relative to the
sample (4), and
using changes in the correction signal in conjunction with the position
signals to generate (via 37) a human readable topographical image of the
surface of the sample.
3. The method in accordance with claim 1, wherein during the detecting step
the sample (4) is oscillated in z-direction by appropriately modulating
the xyz-drive (3) on which the sample is held, at the eigen frequency of
said cantilever (7) and with an amplitude between 0.1 and 1 nanometer, for
causing the cantilever (7) to oscillate and thus modulate the tunnel
current.
4. The method in accordance with claim 1, wherein during the detecting step
said cantilever (7) is excited to oscillate in z-direction at an amplitude
in the 0.01 . . . 0.1 nanometer range, and including the further step of
deriving an additional correction signal from the changes in amplitude
occurring as the sample (4) is scanned.
5. The method in accordance with claim 1, including the step of exciting
said cantilever (7) to oscillate in z-direction at an amplitude in the
0.01 . . . 0.1 nanometer range, and deriving an additional correction
signal from changes in the phase of the cantilever's oscillation occurring
as the sample (4) is scanned.
6. The method in accordance with claim 1, including the steps of:
feeding back one predetermined percentage of said correction signal to the
control mechanism (9) for the tunnel tip (8); and
applying another predetermined percentage of said correction signal to the
control mechanism (3) for the sample holder (3) for driving the sample (4)
and the tunnel tip (8) in opposite directions for correction of such
distance.
7. An atomic force microscope for evaluating the surface of a sample (4),
said microscope comprising:
means including first and second tunnel electrodes and associated
electronics for measuring the distance between said tunnel electrodes and
for generating a correction signal in response to deviations of said
distance from a predetermined value;
said first tunnel electrode including a cantilever (7) having at one end
thereof a point (5) adjacent which the sample surface is disposed;
said second tunnel electrode (8) being disposed adjacent and spaced
distance from said first tunnel electrode (7);
means (9) for moving said second electrode relative to said first
electrode;
means responsive to said correction signal for maintaining the distance
between the sample and point constant; and
means for moving the sample relative to said point.
8. A microscope in accordance with claim 7, including:
means (33) for generating a series of successive position signals, each
indicative of the then current position of the point (5) relative to the
sample (4), and
means (37) responsive to the correction signal and position signals to
generate a human readable topographical image of the surface of the
sample.
9. A microscope in accordance with claim 7, wherein said point (5) consists
of a diamond needle attached to said cantilever (7).
10. A microscope in accordance with claim 7, wherein said cantilever (7) is
fixed to a part (6) of a base (1) and a piezoelectric element (13) is
arranged between said cantilever (7) and said part (6).
11. A microscope in accordance with claim 7, wherein said sample holder (3)
is supported by a base (1, 2) by means of vibration damping means (11,
17).
12. A microscope in accordance with claim 11, wherein the sample holder (3)
is attached to a supporting member (16) which in turn is fixed to said
vibration damping means (17), and means (14) is provided for coarse
adjustment of said sample (4) with respect to said point (5) in
z-direction, for moving said supporting member (16) against the resistance
of said vibration means (17).
13. A microscope in accordance with claim 7, wherein said cantilever (7)
has one end rigidly connected to a common base (1), supporting means (16,
20) respectively supporting an xyz-drive and sample holder (3) and a
z-drive and tunnel tip support (9), and vibration damping means (17, 19)
carried by said base interposed between said base and supporting means.
14. A microscope in accordance with claim 7, wherein said cantilever (7) is
electrically conductive on its side facing said tunnel tip (8), and an
electrical potential difference is maintained between said tunnel tip (8)
and the side of the cantilever (7) which it faces.
15. A microscope in accordance with claim 7, wherein said cantilever (7)
consists of a gold foil of about 25 micrometer thickness.
16. A method for generating a topographical image of a surface of a sample
with a resolution better than 100 nm, comprising the following steps:
moving a point (5) which is fixed to the free end of a spring-like
cantilever (7) toward the surface of the sample (4) to be inspected to a
distance where the forces occurring between the atoms at the apex of said
point (5) and on the sample's surface are larger than 10.sup.-20 N and the
resulting force deflects said cantilever (7);
detecting the deflection of said cantilever (7) by means of a detector (8)
which is disposed adjacent said free end of said cantilever (7) and
provides an output signal indicative of the distance between the
cantilever (7) and said sample (4);
using variations in the output signal of the detector (8) to generate a
correction signal;
maintaining said distance substantially at a constant value by using said
correction signal in a servo-like system; and
moving the sample relative to said point (5).
17. The method in accordance with claim 16, comprising the further steps
of:
generating a series of successive position signals (via 33), each
indicative of the then current position of the point (5) relative to the
sample (4), and
using changes in the correction signal in conjunction with the position
signals to generate (via 37) a human readable topographical image of the
surface of the sample. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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TECHNICAL FIELD
This invention relates to a method for imaging surfaces of objects with
atomic resolution, and to an atomic force microscope which employs that
method.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Conventional optical microscopes have a resolution limit which is
determined by the aperture of the object lens, and a resolution better
than about one-half the wavelength of the light used can principally not
be achieved. In copending U.S. application, Ser. No. 06/563,722, filed
Dec. 20, 1983, an optical near-field scanning microscope is disclosed
which circumvents the resolution limit through the use of an aperture with
an entrance pupil diameter that is small compared to the wavelength, and
arranged at a distance from the object smaller than the wavelength. This
microscope achieves a resolution on the order of one tenth of the
wavelength, i.e., in the neighborhood of 50 nm.
Electron microscopes typically have resolutions of 20 nm vertical and 1 nm
lateral, but their known disadvantage is that because of the high energies
of the electron beam required in achieving a high resolution, most
surfaces are severely damaged.
The scanning tunneling microscope of U.S. Pat. No. 4,343,993 operates with
much smaller energies. Since its operation and structure is relevant in
connection with the present invention, a brief description of the scanning
tunneling microscope is in order.
A very sharp metal tip is raster-scanned across the surface to be inspected
at a distance so small that the electron clouds of the atoms at the apex
of the tip and on the surface area closest to the tip gently touch. A
so-called tunnel current then flows across the gap provided a potential
difference exists between said tip and the surface. This tunnel current
happens to be exponentially dependent on the distance between tip and
surface, and this phenomenon is used to generate a correction signal based
on the deviations from a predetermined value occurring as the tip is
scanned across the surface of the probe. The correction signal is used to
control the tunnel distance so as to minimize the correction signal, and
to be plotted versus a position signal derived from the physical position
of the tip over the surface being inspected. This technique permits a
resolution down to an atomic scale, i.e., individual atoms on a surface
can be made visible.
The scanning tunneling microscope requires the existence of a potential
difference across the tunnel gap. Accordingly, tunnel tip and surface to
be inspected either have to consist of electrically conductive material or
must be coated with such material. (An insulating surface layer thinner
than the tunneling length is permissible.) Thus, the scanning tunneling
microscope has a natural limitation where the surface of an insulator is
to be studied. Obviously, many of its details are sacrificed if a surface
must first be coated with a metal layer, however thin that layer may be.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is, therefore, an object of the invention to describe a method for
imaging the surface of any material with atomic resolution, which method
does not require high energies or preparatory metal coating, and which is
not limited to working with electrical conductors.
It is a further object of the invention to propose an atomic force
microscope with which the inventive method can be performed. The principle
underlying both the method and the microscope is based on the insight that
if atoms are approached to one another so closely that their electron
clouds touch (i.e., that there is a low-level overlap of the wave
functions of the front atom of a sharp tip with the surface atoms of the
sample to be inspected), interatomic forces occur. However, these forces
are extremely small and hitherto have been very difficult to measure
outside a laboratory environment and at a reasonable scanning rate. This
becomes now possible with the present invention in that the interatomic
forces are employed to deflect a very small spring, and the deflections of
said spring are measured with a tunneling microscope.
According to the invention, applicant's method for generating a
topographical image of a sample surface with a resolution better than 100
nanometers is characterized by the following steps: A sharp point which is
fixed to one end of a spring-like cantilever is brought so close to the
surface of a sample to be inspected that the forces occurring between said
point and the sample's surface are larger than 10.sup.-20 N such that the
resulting force deflects the cantilever. The deflection of the cantilever
is detected by means of a tunnel tip disposed adjacent the cantilever. The
tunnel current then flowing across the gap between the cantilever and
tunnel tip is maintained at a constant value by using any detected
variations of the tunnel current to generate a correction signal. The
correction signal is used, among other things, to maintain the
point-to-sample distance constant.
Applicant's atomic force microscope according to the present invention
performs the method described above and comprises a sample holder designed
for moving the sample in xyz-directions by steps in the nanometer range,
and means including first and second tunnel electrodes and associated
electronics for measuring the distance between the tunnel electrodes and
generating a correction signal in response to deviations of said distance
from a predetermined value. This atomic force microscope is characterized
in that the sample holder is disposed opposite a sharp point fixed to one
end of a spring-like cantilever. The cantilever constitutes or carries the
first of the electrodes, the second tunnel electrode being movably
disposed adjacent the first tunnel electrode. The correction signal is
applied to the sample holder for maintaining the sample-to-point distance
constant; the correction signal may be applied to a plotter connected to a
source of position pulses derived from the scanning of the point across
the sample's surface for depicting the contour of the sample surface.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Details of preferred embodiments of the invention will hereafter be
described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings
in which:
FIG. 1 illustrates the configuration of the essential parts of the atomic
force microscope embodying the invention;
FIG. 2 illustrates a preferred embodiment of the atomic force microscope of
FIG. 1; and
FIG. 3 depicts circuitry for permitting operation of the microscope of the
present invention in a selectable one of four modes.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to FIG. 1, the basic configuration of the atomic force microscope
embodying the invention comprises a rigid base 1 which may, for example,
consist of an aluminum block. Mounted to an arm 2 of base 1 is an
xyz-drive 3 which permits a sample 4 to be displaced in x, y, and z
directions with respect to a stationary point 5. Point 5 is supported on
an arm 6 protruding from base 1 and carrying a cantilever which in the
preferred embodiment takes the form of a leaf spring 7 with point 5 fixed
to the upper end of said spring.
Facing the back of spring 7 is a tunnel tip 8 supported by a z-drive 9.
Z-drive 9 permits tunnel tip 8 to advance or retract with respect to
spring 7 and is supported on an arm 10 extending from base 1.
Since this instrument is intended to investigate surfaces at extreme
magnifications, it is necessary to provide means for eliminating all
ambient vibrations, such as building vibrations. Toward this end, cushions
11, 12 of Viton rubber separate the drives 3 and 9 from the arms 2 and 10
of base 1. (Viton is a trademark of E. I. duPont de Nemours & Co. for its
brand of damping material.)
In operation, the sample 4 to be inspected is mounted on xyz-drive 3 with
its surface facing point 5. When the sample 4 is moved toward point 5 to a
distance where the electron clouds of the atoms at the apex of point 5
touch the electron clouds of the atoms on the surface of the sample,
interatomic forces occur. These forces, which are repulsive, are on the
order of 10.sup.-13 N and operate to deflect spring 7, to which point 5 is
fixed.
In view of the smallness of the forces occurring between individual atoms,
the masses of point 5 and of spring 7 should be as small as possible.
Also, to permit a large deflection, the spring should be soft, but at the
same time it should be reasonably insensitive against building vibrations.
The strongest frequency components of building vibrations are around 100
Hz. Thus the spring/point assembly should have an eigen frequency f.sub.o
much higher than 100 Hz, and this requires a very small mass.
In one experimental embodiment, with a tiny diamond stylus arranged on the
smallest of springs that could be hand-made, the mass of the point/spring
assembly was about 10.sup.-8 kg and the eigen frequency was found to be 2
kHz. The spring consisted of a thin gold foil of 25 .mu.m thickness and
0.8 mm length, and an observed deflection of 40 pm corresponds to a force
on the order of 10.sup.-10 N.
Spring 7 is supported on arm 6 by means of a piezoelectric element 13.
Tunnel tip 8 is advanced by z-drive 9 toward spring 7 to within a
preselected distance, i.e., about 0.3 nm, so that a tunnel current will
flow across the gap between the spring and tip, provided a suitable
potential difference exists between them. This tunnel current is
exponentially dependent on the distance between the tunnel electrodes.
Thus, the tunnel current is a measure of the deviation of the surface
elevation at the actual location of inspection of sample 4 from a
predetermined or home level.
In normal operation, the atomic force microscope according to the invention
will be used for mapping a larger part of a surface: e.g., that of a
semiconductor wafer or circuit board. Accordingly, point 5 is scanned
across the sample in a matrix fashion. If the value of the tunnel current
for each spot on the sample surface is plotted (by means not shown) versus
the location information of that spot, a topographical image of the sample
surface will result. The tunnel current variation resulting from the
scanning of a (usually non-flat) surface is used to generate a correction
signal which is applied in a feedback loop to the z-portion of xyz-drive 3
so as to control the distance between point 5 and sample 4 in such a
manner that the interatomic force is maintained at a constant value.
As mentioned above, spring 7 is supported on arm 6 by means of a
piezoelectric element 13. This enables oscillation of the spring in the
z-direction, e.g., at its eigen frequency, in one particular mode of
operation which will be described later.
FIG. 2 shows in more detail the preferred embodiment of the atomic force
microscope of the present invention. The distance between point 5 and
sample 4 is roughly adjustable by means of a screw 14 which bears against
a Viton pad 15 sitting on a member 16. The latter is supported via a Viton
cushion 17 by the base 1. Member 16 carries the xyz-drive 3 on which
sample 4 is held. Cantilever 7 is fixed to base 1 and carries point 5, the
apex of which faces sample 4. Tunnel tip 8 is rough-positioned with
respect to cantilever 7 by means of a screw 18 which permits squeezing a
Viton cushion 19. The fine-positioning of tunnel tip 8 is accomplished by
z-drive 9 which is supported on a member 20 carried by base 1 via said
Viton cushion 19. To eliminate as much as possible the ambient vibrations
which might affect bench 21 on which the atomic force microscope rests, a
vibration filter 22 is provided. This filter comprises a stack of metal
plates 23 separated by rubber pads 24 of decreasing sizes (from the bottom
up), as known from IBM Technical Disclosure Bulletin Vol. 27, No. 5, p.
3137.
FIG. 3 depicts circuitry, including feedback loops, that permit four
different feedback modes in operating the atomic force microscope of the
present invention. As illustrated, this circuitry comprises a lead 26
connecting to an I-V converter 27 an electrode associated with the side of
cantilever spring 7 adjacent tunnel tip 8. Converter 27 converts current
into voltage to detect variations in the tunnel current. Converter 27
forms part of a feedback loop including a controller 28. Controller 28 is
connected to the z-drive of the xyz-drive 3 to modulate the latter in the
z direction. Controller 28 processes the voltage signal from converter 27
to remove noise and provide a signal of appropriate sign and amplitude
according to a selectable one of the aforementioned feedback modes which
will now be described.
Assume now that controller 28 is conditioned to operate in the first mode
[ac]. In the first mode, after proper adjustment of the distances between
sample 4 and point 5, and between cantilever 7 and tunnel tip 8,
respectively, xyz-drive 3 is modulated to expand and retract in
z-direction with an amplitude between 0.1 and 1 nanometer at the eigen
frequency of cantilever 7. The interatomic force existing between the
front atoms at the apex of point 5 and those on the surface of sample 4
causes cantilever 7 to oscillate. This oscillation, of course, changes the
distance between cantilever 7 and tunnel tip 8, so as to modulate the
tunnel current. With a switch 30 (FIG. 3) in the position in which it is
shown, controller 28 is connected to a modulator 31. Controller 28 filters
out the one specific frequency of the modulated tunnel current that is
applied as a correction signal in line 32 to the control input of the
z-section of xyz-drive 3, forcing sample 4 to be retracted.
Assume now that controller 28 is conditioned to operate in the second mode
[pz]. In the second mode, switch 30 is operated to connect the modulator
31 to the z-section of a controller 33. Controller 33 controls the
xyz-drive 3 in the x and y directions to scan the sample 4 in the x and y
directions, and also modulates the piezoelectric element 13 in the z
direction. Cantilever 7 (FIG. 1) is excited by means of piezoelectric
element 13 to oscillate in z-direction with its eigen frequency at an
amplitude in the 0.01 . . . 0.1 nanometer range. The interatomic force
existing at the interface between point 5 and sample 4 will cause the
amplitude of the oscillation of cantilever 7 to change. From this change,
a correction signal can be derived in line 34.
With controller 28 conditioned to operate in the third mode [.phi.],
feedback operation is identical with the second mode, except for the fact
that here the changes in phase of the cantilever's oscillation are used to
derive the correction signal in line 34.
When conditioned to operate in the fourth mode [v(I)], controller 28
converts the voltage from converter 27 into at least one preselected
bandwidth of frequencies, which may include the dc component. In the
fourth mode which applies in situations where a small bias force is
desirable or necessary, switch 30 is moved to a position 35 in which it
disconnects the modulator 31 from both controllers 28 and 33. In this
mode, sample 4 is slowly approached to the stationary cantilever 7 the
deflection of which varies the tunnel current flowing across the gap
between cantilever 7 and tunnel tip 8. Based on the variation of the
tunnel current, a control signal is derived in line 32 which directly
controls the z-section of xyz-drive 3. Accordingly, with decreasing
distance between sample 4 and point 5, the interatomic force increases and
deflects cantilever 7 which in turn causes the tunnel gap to become
smaller and, hence, the tunnel current to increase. In the feedback
arrangement of this mode, the increasing tunnel current operates to
retract sample 4 and, thus, decrease the interatomic force, and so forth.
For certain applications, it may be convenient to feed back some percentage
of the control signal derived from the tunnel current variation to the
z-drive 9 to directly contribute to the controlling of the tunneling
microscope. Toward this end, a controller 36 (FIG. 3) is interposed
between converter 27 and the z-drive 9 to generate an additional
correction signal. In this case, sample 4 and tunnel tip 8 are driven in
opposite directions--tunnel tip 8, however, a factor 10, 100 or 1000, for
example, less in amplitude. The attention of the practitioners of this
invention should be drawn to the fact that in contrast to the
above-described first through third feedback modes, in the fourth mode the
absolute value of the interatomic force is only well defined at the
beginning of the measurement when a certain deflection of cantilever 7 is
adjusted. After a while, the deflection may become undefined because of
thermal drift.
As mentioned above, sample 4 is supported on xyz-drive 3, the z-section
being used to fine-adjust the distance between sample 4 and point 5. The
xy-sections of xyz-drive 3 are used for displacing sample 4 in its
xy-plane with respect to point 5. The displacement is controlled so that
point 5 performs a raster scan of the surface of sample 4. The raster scan
signal is, hence, representative of the position, in the xy-plane, of
point 5 over sample 4.
In an embodiment in accordance with FIG. 2 operated under the conditions of
feedback mode four, a vertical resolution of 0.1 nanometer and a lateral
resolution of 3 nanometers was achieved, although the measurement was
conducted in air. It should be noted that in air all surfaces tend to be
covered with a thin film of water, and this might require a certain
minimum force for point 5 to be able to transit that wafer film.
So that the roughness of the sample 4 can not only be scanned but also
recorded, the apparatus embodying the invention preferably includes a
plotter 37 (FIG. 3). Plotter 37 provides a plot of the aforementioned
raster scan signal versus the aforementioned feedback or correction signal
to yield an image of the topography of the surface of sample 4. More
specifically, plotter 37 receives its x and y inputs from the x and y
outputs, respectively, of controller 33 to xyz-drive 3. The z input of
plotter 37 is derived from the output of controller 36 which via z-drive 9
is also responsible for maintaining the distance between cantilever 7 and
tunnel tip 8 essentially constant. As sample 4 is moved by xyz-drive 3 so
that point 5 scans the surface of the sample along, e.g. cartesian
coordinates, the stylus of plotter 37 is moved correspondingly (but at
enormously enlarged scale), with the z input superpositioned over the
y-coordinate signal.
In other words, as point 5 scans the surface of sample in the x-direction
at a fixed y-value, the roughness of the surface of sample will cause the
sample-to-surface distance to vary and thus cause the atomic forces
between the sample and surface to vary and cause spring 7 to be deflected.
As spring 7 deflects, the tunneling distance between the spring and tip 8
changes; preferably for each 0.1 nanometer of change of that distance, the
tunneling current changes by one order of magnitude. This change is
measured by converter 27. The output signal of converter 7, either via
controller 36, controls z-drive 9 to cause tunnel tip 8 to return to the
position it had prior to the change; or, via controller 28, controls the
z-section of xyz-drive 3 to cause sample 4 to move back to the position it
had prior to the deflection of spring 7.
The feedback output signal of controller 36 is used to control the movement
of the stylus of plotter 37 in the y-direction as an addition to the fixed
y-value which corresponds to the position of point 5 over the surface of
sample 4. Two of the dimensions, x and z, can easily be shown on plotter
37. By portraying the measured values of x and z as a set of curves x(z)
plotted as a function of the parameter y, the third dimension, y, can be
represented.
By repeating this process for all values of the y-coordinate, a virtually
three-dimensional image of the surface scanned will be created.
Additional explanation, if desired, is contained in U.S. Pat. No.
4,343,993, the description of which is hereby incorporated by reference,
especially that portion thereof from column 5, line 55 through column 6,
line 9.
It will be understood that, if preferred, a viewing screen (not shown) may
be used in place of plotter 37. Also, by placing the atomic force
microscope of the present invention in an ultra-high vacuum environment,
the stability and resolving power of the instrument will be dramatically
improved.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with
reference to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood by
those skilled in the art that the foregoing and other changes in the form
and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and
scope of the invention.
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