The interatomic potential is key to understanding all properties of materials. Yet, conventional atomic force microscopes do not usually measure the interatomic potential, because they lack control of the tip-sample distance. Here, we propose a simple methodology for measuring tip-surface interactions directly as a function of tip-sample distance, rather than deflection as a function of sample displacement. We use an AC interferometer to monitor the absolute tip displacement. When a force is applied on the tip a negative feedback loop displaces the cantilever anchoring point, deflecting the lever such that the tip position remains constant. This feedback loop actively maintains the tip at a distance from an optical fibre where the interferometer sensitivity is maximum. As a result, the tip-sample distance or the indentation is directly given by the sample motion and the tip does not jump-to-contact.
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Nobre et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75b5dc6e9836116a22904 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ultramic.2026.114324
Joana Nobre
Tiago Cordeiro
Tiago T. Robalo
Ultramicroscopy
University of Lisbon
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