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An ultrafast piezoelectric Z-scanner with a resonance frequency above 1.1 MHz for high-speed atomic force microscopy.

Masahiro ShimizuChihiro OkamotoKenichi UmedaShinji WatanabeToshio AndoNoriyuki Kodera
Published in: The Review of scientific instruments (2022)
The Z-scanner is the major component limiting the speed performance of all current high-speed atomic force microscopy systems. Here, we present an ultrafast piezoelectric Z-scanner with a resonance frequency above 1.1 MHz, achieving a record response time of ∼0.14 µs, approximately twice as fast as conventional piezoelectric-based Z-scanners. In the mechanical design, a small piezo-stack is supported at its bottom four vertices on a cone-like hollow, allowing the resonance frequency of the Z-scanner to remain as high as that of the piezo in free vibration. Its maximum displacement, ∼190 nm at 50 V, is large enough for imaging bio-molecules. For imaging bio-molecules in a buffer solution, the upper half of the Z-scanner is wrapped in a thin film resistant to water and chemicals, providing an excellent waterproof and mechanical durability without lowering the resonance frequency. We demonstrate that this Z-scanner can observe actin filaments, fragile biological polymers, for more than five times longer than the conventional Z-scanner at a tip velocity of 800 µm/s.
Keyphrases
  • high speed
  • atomic force microscopy
  • energy transfer
  • high resolution
  • image quality
  • single molecule
  • photodynamic therapy
  • computed tomography
  • metal organic framework
  • molecularly imprinted