Control of quality factor of atomic force microscopy cantilever by cavity optomechanical effect
Abstract: Quality factor plays a fundamental role in dynamic mode atomic force microscopy. We present a technique to modify the quality factor of an atomic force microscopy cantilever within a Fabry-P\'erot optical interferometer. The experimental setup uses two separate laser sources to detect and excite the oscillation of the cantilever. While the intensity modulation of the excitation laser drives the oscillation of the cantilever, the average intensity can be used to modify the quality factor via optomechanical force, without changing the fiber-cantilever cavity length. The technique enables users to optimize the quality factor for different types of measurements without influencing the deflection measurement sensitivity. An unexpected frequency shift was also observed and modelled as temperature dependence of the cantilever's Young's modulus, which was validated using finite element simulation. The model was used to compensate for the thermal frequency shift. The simulation provided relations between optical power, temperature, and frequency shift.
- D. M. Weld and A. Kapitulnik, Appl. Phys. Lett. 89, 164102 (2006).
- C. H. Metzger and K. Karrai, Nature 432, 1002 (2004).
- L. Tröger and M. Reichling, Appl. Phys. Lett. 97, 213105 (2010).
- A. Von Schmidsfeld and M. Reichling, Appl. Phys. Lett. 107, 2 (2015).
- Y. Miyahara and P. Grütter, in Kelvin Probe Force Microscopy: From Single Charge Detection to Device Characterization, Vol. 48, edited by S. Sadewasser and T. Glatzel (Springer International Publishing AG, Berlin, Heidelberg, 2018) pp. 23–47.
- W. W. Coblentz, Journal of the Franklin Institute 170, 169 (1910).
- P. R. Wilkinson and J. R. Pratt, Appl. Opt. 50, 4671 (2011).
- A. Demir, J. Appl. Phys. 129, 044503 (2021).
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.