1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is a device and a method for allowing for a scanned probe microscope with operation in liquid or air using a design that does not obstruct either geometrically or optically or both the integration of such a device into other microscope systems such as upright optical microscopes. It also permits the use in liquids using a feedback mechanism without optical interference that has been difficult to extend to such liquid cell imaging. As a result of this advance it permits the application of multiprobe atomic force microscopes in liquid without optical interference. The invention also embodies methods that allow for multiprobe operation in liquid where optical interference is not an issue.
2. Description of the Background Art
Biological atomic force microscopes (AFM) and scanned probe microscope (SPM) devices are today seriously limited by geometric and optical obstruction and/or optical or other interference. Thus, BioAFMs cannot be integrated into upright microscopes or advanced concepts in optical microscopy such as 4pi configurations or many non-linear optical protocols. In addition, studying samples such as single molecules on opaque substrates or simultaneously investigating optically and with AFM, highly scattering samples such as biological tissue have been impossible. Furthermore, all BioAFM/SPMs today suffer from optical interference from the feedback mechanism used. In addition no BioAFM/SPM has the ability to use from above water immersion objectives. Many of these limitations prevent BioAFM/SPMs to be incorporated for example into standard upright microscope geometries often used in spectroscopic techniques such as Raman. This prevents obtaining spectroscopic techniques to obtain data at the same side of a scattering sample as the scanned probe microscopy data is being obtained.
Previous literature relating to this invention is the use of tuning forks as a non-optical feedback mechanism. In general when tuning forks are used they are not used in aqueous media and so this limits such approaches to non-biological applications.
There are a few examples of approaches to the use of tuning fork feedback in AFMs that work in liquid. One such approach only limits the application to non-aqueous liquids [Kageshima et al, “Noncontact Atomic Force Microscopy in Liquid Environment with Quartz Tuning Fork and Carbon Nanotube Probe,” Applied Surface Science 188, 440 (2002)]. The difficulty of using a tuning fork in aqueous liquids is illustrated by the work of [Koopman et al, “Shear Force Imaging of Soft Samples in Liquid Using a Diving Bell Concept,” Applied Physics Letters 83, 5083 (2003)] where ultimate efforts are taken to prevent the tuning fork from entering the aqueous solution using a diving bell mechanism. Other workers have also prevented the tuning fork from entering the liquid medium by limiting the use of the probe to a straight probe [Höppener et al, “High-Resolution Near-Field Optical Imaging of Single Nuclear Pore Complexes under Physiological Conditions,” Biophysical Journal 88, 3681 (2005)].
A critical factor in the above limitations is that all BioAFM/SPMs use the same beam bounce laser feedback mechanism which causes serious geometric constraints. In spite of the realization of this limitation it has been impossible to resolve the problem of employing a non-optical method of feedback using either a straight or cantilevered probe that could work in air or in a liquid medium without regard to the nature of the medium or to device an optical technique that would resolve some of the problems noted above. Also there is no example of a cantilevered probe being used with the tuning fork in or out of the liquid medium and being able to image sample in a liquid medium.
Also there are no examples of the ability to use a liquid immersion objective from above while the sample under the liquid medium is also being imaged from above by a scanned probe microscope probe.
Also there are no examples of using multiple independent AFM probes in either an air or liquid medium.
The present invention is a method and a device for permitting scanned probe microscopes with a non-optical feedback mechanism to be used in air or in liquid. There are many embodiments of this objective which require both geometric construction of the scanning device that can incorporate the non-optical feedback mechanism in a way that does not obstruct geometrically essentially any lens from above or below and permits free access to the probe that is interacting with the sample. In one such embodiment, a scanner in x, y and z can move the probe with a structure in which either the non-optical feedback mechanism is in the liquid or in the air and can use either a cantilevered or straight probe. The system has the ability to work with a liquid or water immersion objective from above. This system can also be used with a variety of cantilevered probes with the tuning fork out of the liquid or partially in or out of the liquid. The system can be constructed with an x, y and z sample scanner or with multiple independent scanned probe microscopy probes that can work in liquid and/or in air.
The system also opens up the use of many new forms of scanned probe microscopy with new functional capabilities such as structurally correlated with AFM patch clamping, scanning electrochemical microscopy with new opportunities for optical integration, chemical deposition in and out of liquids with new opportunities for optical integration etc.
The foregoing, and additional objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent to those of skill in the art from the following detailed description of a preferred and various embodiments thereof, taken with the accompanying drawings, which are briefly described as follows.
A diagrammatic representation of a system that implements a first preferred embodiment of the subject invention is shown in
Another diagrammatic view of a system that incorporates the methodologies of the subject invention is shown in
An actual system using one embodiment of the invention is shown in
Another embodiment of a non-optical feedback with a probe is shown in
A multiple probe system incorporating two probes 5.1 and 5.2 which can work with the embodiments of the subject invention to provide air or liquid operation is illustrated in
In some embodiments of this invention the tuning fork is coated with a material that is not conductive and has little perturbation on the mechanical properties of the tuning fork. There are numerous ways to accomplish this; some involve deposition of a thin film of organic material that prevents electrical interference in such media as aqueous media. However also dipping procedures and other methods can be used to coat the tuning fork or other non-optical device and the method that is used does not change one of the important concepts of this invention to accomplish a non-optical method such as a tuning fork for working in liquid or air.
Also it should be realized that there are many other possible methods other than tuning forks for providing the goals of the subject invention. One such example is piezo cantilever devices which can be coated as above. There are also many more examples in the same vein.
Furthermore, multiple probe operation in liquid has never been accomplished either with optical or non-optical feedback. Non-optical feedback that can now work in any liquid clearly permits this. However, if the non-optical feedback is relaxed then the present invention also includes such methodologies as described in
In
All of the above methods can be used for force spectroscopy and those embodiments of this invention that allow for phase feedback with or without phase locked loops can provide for exceptional sensitivity in such force spectroscopy applications with single or multiple probe operation.
Also the ability to have a lens from above at the same side as the probe permits combination of force spectroscopy that were difficult to impossible to achieve in the past such as combination with Raman spectroscopy or non-linear optical techniques which are now all possible with the embodiments of the invention described herein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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197329 | Mar 2009 | IL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2010/025388 | 2/25/2010 | WO | 00 | 2/21/2012 |