Scanning probe microscopy
Scanning probe microscopy (SPM) is a family of techniques that use a sharp physical probe to scan the surface of a sample, measuring interactions such as forces, currents, or fields to generate high-resolution images and maps of surface properties at the nanoscale or even atomic level.[1] These methods enable the study of topography, electronic structure, mechanical properties, and chemical composition without requiring a vacuum or specific sample preparation, distinguishing them from traditional electron microscopy.[2] The foundational technique, scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), was invented in 1981 by Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer at IBM's Zurich Research Laboratory, utilizing quantum tunneling of electrons between a conductive probe tip and sample to achieve atomic resolution on conductive surfaces.[3] This breakthrough earned Binnig and Rohrer the 1986 Nobel Prize in Physics, shared with Ernst Ruska for electron microscopy advancements.[4] Building on STM, atomic force microscopy (AFM) was developed in 1986 by Binnig, Christoph Gerber, and Calvin Quate, extending SPM capabilities to non-conductive samples by detecting van der Waals forces or other interactions via a cantilever-mounted tip.[5] Subsequent variants, such as magnetic force microscopy (MFM) and scanning near-field optical microscopy (SNOM), have expanded SPM to probe magnetic, optical, and other properties.[1] SPM techniques have revolutionized nanoscience and nanotechnology, enabling applications in materials characterization, biological imaging (e.g., DNA and proteins),[6] semiconductor device development, and surface manipulation for nanofabrication.[2] Modern instruments operate in diverse environments, from ambient air to ultra-high vacuum and cryogenic temperatures down to millikelvin levels, achieving resolutions better than 0.1 nm laterally and providing spectroscopic data on local material properties.[1] As of 2025, ongoing advancements, including hybrid systems combining SPM with other spectroscopies, AI-driven autonomous operation, and high-speed imaging techniques, continue to push the boundaries of precision measurement and quantum material studies.[7][8]Overview and History
Definition and Principles
Scanning probe microscopy (SPM) encompasses a family of techniques that employ a sharp physical probe to scan a sample's surface, detecting local interactions to generate high-resolution maps of topography, electronic properties, or other surface characteristics at atomic or molecular scales.[1][9] These methods enable nanoscale imaging and manipulation by exploiting interactions that are highly sensitive to the probe-sample separation, typically on the order of nanometers.[10] The fundamental principles of SPM revolve around measuring localized probe-sample interactions, such as quantum mechanical tunneling currents or van der Waals forces, which decay rapidly with distance and provide exquisite sensitivity to surface features.[1] The probe is systematically raster scanned across the sample in a grid-like pattern using piezoelectric actuators for precise, incremental movements, allowing point-by-point data collection to reconstruct the surface profile.[10] A critical feedback loop continuously monitors the interaction signal—such as current or force—and adjusts the probe's vertical position to maintain a setpoint, ensuring stable imaging and compensating for surface topography variations.[11] SPM achieves resolutions down to the atomic level, with typical lateral resolutions of 0.1–10 nm and vertical resolutions of 0.01–1 nm, limited primarily by probe geometry and interaction range.[9] In atomic force microscopy, a prominent SPM variant, the tip-sample force arises as the negative gradient of the interaction potential energy, expressed asF = -\frac{dU}{dr},
where U(r) is the potential energy and r is the separation distance; this force deflects the supporting cantilever according to Hooke's law, F = -kz, with k as the spring constant and z as deflection—equating these relations quantifies the interaction from measurable cantilever response.[12][13]