Equipment

Listed below are the major microscopes, ancillary equipment, and facilities available to users of the Microscopy Suite. Click the equipment name for more information on each piece of equipment.

Please be aware that the ITG staff cannot respond to questions about particular pieces of equipment or software packages unless those questions are related to research conducted in the ITG laboratories. The ITG does not sell, lease, or distribute equipment or software, save that clearly marked as developed by the ITG.

Equipment

Atomic Force Microscope (MultiMode AFM)

afm

Atomic force microscopy (AFM) is a method of measuring surface topography on a scale from angstroms to 100 microns. The technique involves imaging a sample through the use of a probe, or tip, with a radius of 20 nm. The tip is held several nanometers above the surface using a feedback mechanism that measures surfaceµtip interactions on the scale of nanoNewtons. Variations in tip height are recorded while the tip is scanned repeatedly across the sample, producing a topographic image of the surface.

In addition to basic AFM, the instrument in the Microscopy Suite is capable of producing images in a number of other modes, including tapping, magnetic force, electrical force, and pulsed force. In tapping mode, the tip is oscillated above the sample surface, and data may be collected from interactions with surface topography, stiffness, and adhesion. This results in an expanded number of image contrast methods compared to basic AFM. Magnetic force mode imaging utilizes a magnetic tip to enable the visualization of magnetic domains on the sample. In electrical force mode imaging a charged tip is used to locate and record variations in surface charge. In pulsed force mode (Witec), the sample is oscillated beneath the tip, and a series of pseudo force-distance curves are generated. This permits the separation of sample topography, stiffness, and adhesion values, producing three independent images, or three individual sets of data, simultaneously.

This instrument may also be used with a scanning tunnelling microscope (STM) head. STM utilizes quantum mechanical tunnelling of electrons to image conducting surfaces.

Features

  • Capable of contact, tapping, magnetic force, electric force, and phase imaging modes; J-scanner with an x,y range of 125 microns and a vertical range of 5 microns; A-scanner with an x,y range of 1 micron and a vertical range of 400 nm; analyses may be performed in air or liquid cell; scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) head
  • Pulsed force mode

User Resources

For additional information about this piece of equipment, see the Calendars, Contacts, and Fees pages.

Primary Contacts
Secondary Contacts
Manufacturer Digital Instruments
Equipment Model Multimode NanoScope IIIa
Location B606 F
Phone Numbers (217) 265-0875, (217) 265-5071

Facilities

Wet Lab - B612

Bench space, fume hood, some chemicals and solvents, dual source metal evaporator, pH meter, dissecting scope, microbalance, glow discharge system, reverse osmosis water purification system, sonicator, sputter coater, critical point dryer, low speed bone saw, osmium plasma coater, and other equipment.

BL-2 Lab - B420

Bench space, biosafety cabinet for sample manipulations, centrifuge, and two incubators for short-term sample storage.

 

Microscopy Suite

405 North Mathews Avenue, Urbana, IL
61801 USA

(217) 300-0566