A scanning probe microscope assembly that has an atomic force measurement (AFM) mode, a scanning tunneling measurement (STM) mode, a near-field spectrophotometry mode, a near-field optical mode, and a hardness testing mode for examining an object.
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38. A scanning probe microscope assembly for examining an object wherein said scanning probe microscope assembly has a hardness testing mode and at least one of a tunneling current mode and an atomic force mode, said scanning probe microscope assembly comprising:
a probe having a tip with a sharp end;
means for directing said tip to penetrate said object at a specific point with a predefined known force; and
means for measuring the conductivity of said object before and while said tip penetrates said object to determine the hardness of said object.
24. A scanning probe microscope assembly for examining an object, comprising:
a probe having a tip, said tip including:
a core material with a sharp end;
a light emissive layer over at least a portion of said core material; and
a conductive layer over said light emissive layer but not over said core material at said sharp end;
means for applying a voltage between said conductive layer and said core material so that said light emissive layer emits light within said probe that propagates through said probe and is emitted at said sharp end, said emitted light optically interacting with said object; and
a photodetector for detecting light resulting from said emitted light optically interacting with said object.
1. A scanning probe microscope assembly for examining an object, comprising:
a probe having a tip with a sharp end;
means for inducing and detecting non-optical interaction of said tip and said object, said non-optical interaction being other than a tunneling current between said tip and said object;
a light source optically coupled to said tip for providing light to said tip;
said tip being shaped to emit light resulting from said provided light at said sharp end so that said emitted light optically interacts with said object, wherein said tip is shaped to capture light resulting from said emitted light optically interacting with said object; and
a photodetector that is optically coupled to said tip for detecting said captured light.
22. A scanning probe microscope assembly for examining an object, comprising:
a probe having a tip with a sharp end;
means for inducing and detecting non-optical interaction of said tip and said object;
a light source optically coupled to said tip for providing light to said tip wherein said tip includes a core material transparent to said provided light and a light-emissive coating over said core material at said sharp end, which light-emissive coating emits light in response to said provided light;
said tip being shaped at said sharp end so that emitted light from said light-emissive coating optically interacts with said object; and
a photodetector for detecting light resulting from said emitted light optically interacting with said object.
15. A scanning probe microscope assembly for examining an object, comprising:
a probe having a tip with a sharp end and a base;
means for inducing and detecting non-optical interaction of said tip and said object, said non-optical interaction being other than a tunneling current between said tip and said object;
a light source optically coupled to said tip for providing light to said tip;
a fresnel lens that is formed in said probe over said tip for focusing said provided light in said base of said tip;
said tip being shaped to emit light resulting from said provided light at said sharp end so that said emitted light optically interacts with said object; and
a photodetector for detecting light resulting from said emitted light optically interacting with said object.
23. A scanning probe microscope assembly for examining an object, comprising:
a probe having a tip with a sharp end;
means for inducing and detecting non-optical interaction of said tip and said object;
a light source optically coupled to said tip for providing light to said tip wherein said tip includes a core material transparent to said provided light and a frequency-doubling coating over said core material at said sharp end, which frequency-doubling coating emits light, referred to as emitted light, in response to said provided light;
said tip being shaped at said sharp end so that emitted light from said frequency-doubling coating optically interacts with said object; and
a photodetector for detecting light resulting from said emitted light optically interacting with said object.
16. A scanning probe microscope assembly for examining an object, comprising:
a probe having a tip with a sharp end wherein said tip includes a core material transparent to said provided light and an obdurate layer transparent to said provided light over said core material at least at said sharp end;
means for inducing and detecting non-optical interaction of said tip and said object, said non-optical interaction being other than a tunneling current between said tip and said object;
a light source optically coupled to said tip for providing light to said tip;
said tip being shaped to emit light resulting from said provided light at said sharp end so that said emitted light optically interacts with said object; and
a photodetector that is optically coupled to said tip for detecting light resulting from said emitted light optically interacting with said object.
32. A method of operating a scanning probe microscope for examining an object wherein
said scanning probe microscope has a probe that includes a base, a cantilever connected to said base, and a tip connected to said cantilever,
said cantilever has a free end adjacent to said tip, and
said scanning probe microscope assembly has a tunneling current mode and an atomic force mode,
the method comprising:
inducing and detecting a tunneling current between said tip and said object during said tunneling current mode;
inducing atomic force interaction between said tip and said object and detecting deflection of said cantilever due to said atomic force interaction during said atomic force mode;
providing a clamping structure that surrounds said cantilever and includes clamping arms; and
controlling movement of said clamping arms against said cantilever during said tunneling mode to immobilize said tip with respect to said base.
36. A scanning probe microscope assembly for examining an object wherein said scanning probe microscope assembly has a near-field optical mode and at least one of a tunneling current mode and an atomic force mode, said scanning probe microscope assembly comprising:
a probe having a tip with a sharp end;
a light source optically coupled to said tip;
means for controlling said light source to provide light to said tip during said near-field optical mode;
rotationally polarizing means for rotationally polarizing said provided light;
means for controlling said rotationally polarizing means to rotationally polarize said provided light during said near-field optical mode;
a photodetector for detecting light that results from said emitted light optically interacting with said object; and
deep surface feature analysis means coupled to said photodetector for identifying deep surface features based on said resulting light detected by said photodetector during said near-field optical mode.
39. A scanning probe microscope assembly for examining an object, comprising:
a probe that includes
a base,
a cantilever connected to said base, and
a tip having a sharp end, said tip connected to said cantilever;
atomic force means for inducing atomic force interaction between said tip and said object and for detecting deflection of said cantilever due to said atomic force interaction during said atomic force mode;
tunneling current means for-inducing and detecting a tunneling current between said tip and said object during a tunneling current mode;
holding means for immobilizing said tip with respect to said base during said tunneling current mode;
a light source optically coupled to said tip for providing light to said tip;
said tip being shaped to emit light resulting from said provided light at said sharp end so that said emitted light optically interacts with said object; and
a photodetector for detecting light resulting from said emitted light optically interacting with said object.
31. A method of operating a scanning probe microscope for examining an object wherein
said scanning probe microscope has a probe that includes a base, a cantilever connected to said base, and a tip connected to said cantilever,
said cantilever has a free end adjacent to said tip, and
said scanning probe microscope assembly has a tunneling current mode and an atomic force mode,
the method comprising:
inducing and detecting a tunneling current between said tip and said object during said tunneling current mode;
inducing atomic force interaction between said tip and said object and detecting deflection of said cantilever due to said atomic force interaction during said atomic force mode;
providing a clamping structure having a clamping arm connected to said base, said clamping arm extending from said base and having a free end extending past and opposing said free end of said cantilever; and
controlling movement of said free end of said clamping arm against said free end of said cantilever during said tunneling mode to immobilize said tip with respect to said base.
37. A scanning probe microscope assembly for examining an object wherein said scanning probe microscope assembly has a hardness testing mode and at least one of a tunneling current mode and an atomic force mode, said scanning probe microscope assembly comprising:
a probe having a tip with a sharp end;
a light source optically coupled to said tip;
directing means for directing said tip to penetrate said object at a specific point with a predefined known force;
means for controlling said light source to provide light to said tip during said hardness testing mode before and after said tip penetrates said object;
said tip emitting at said sharp end said light provided before and while said tip penetrates said object so that said emitted light optically interacts with said object before and while said tip penetrates said object;
a photodetector, said photodetector detecting light resulting from said emitted light optically interacting with said object before and while said tip penetrates said object; and
comparing means for comparing said resulting light detected before said tip penetrates said object with said resulting light detected while said tip penetrates said object to determine the hardness of said object.
30. A method of operating a scanning probe microscope for examining an object, said scanning probe microscope having a probe that includes a base, a cantilever connected to said base, and a tip connected to said cantilever, said scanning probe microscope assembly having a tunneling current mode and an atomic force mode, the method comprising:
inducing and detecting a tunneling current between said tip and said object during said tunneling current mode;
inducing atomic force interaction between said tip and said object and detecting deflection of said cantilever due to said atomic force interaction during said atomic force mode; and
immobilizing said tip with respect to said base so as to prevent said tip from moving toward or away from said object during said tunneling current mode, wherein:
said cantilever has a lower surface to which said tip is connected and an upper surface; and
said immobilizing said tip with respect to said base is accomplished by;
a member disposed over said upper surface of said cantilever;
a first coil on said upper surface of said cantilever;
a second coil on said lower surface of said member; and
producing currents in said coils to magnetically immobilize said tip with respect to said base during said tunneling current mode.
35. A method of operating a scanning probe microscope for examining an object, said scanning probe microscope having a probe that includes a base, a cantilever connected to said base, and a tip connected to said cantilever, said scanning probe microscope assembly having a tunneling current mode, an atomic force mode, and a spectrophotometry mode, the method comprising:
inducing and detecting a tunneling current between said tie and said object during said tunneling current mode;
inducing atomic force interaction between said tip and said object and detecting deflection of said cantilever due to said atomic force interaction during said atomic force mode;
immobilizing said tip with respect to said base so as to prevent said tip from moving toward or away from said object during said tunneling current mode;
providing a spectrophotometer including a light source optically coupled to said tip;
controlling said light source to provide light to said tip during said spectrophotometry mode;
said tip being shaped to emit said provided light at said sharp end so that said emitted light optically interacts with said object; and
detecting light that results from said emitted light optically interacting with said object to make spectrophotometric measurements of said detected light.
33. A method of operating a scanning probe microscope for examining an object, said scanning probe microscope having a probe that includes a base, a cantilever connected to said base, and a tip connected to said cantilever, said scanning probe microscope assembly having a tunneling current mode and an atomic force mode, the method comprising:
inducing and detecting a tunneling current between said tip and said object during said tunneling current mode;
inducing atomic force interaction between said tip and said object and detecting deflection of said cantilever due to said atomic force interaction during said atomic force mode; and
immobilizing said tip with respect to said base so as to prevent said tip from moving toward or away from said object during said tunneling current mode, wherein:
said cantilever has a lower surface to which said tip is connected and an upper surface; and
said immobilizing said tip with respect to said base is accomplished by:
providing a member disposed over said upper surface of said cantilever;
providing a permanent magnet on said upper surface of said cantilever;
providing a coil on said lower surface of said member; and
producing a current in said coil to magnetically immobilize said tip with respect to said base during said tunneling current mode.
34. A method of operating a scanning probe microscope for examining an object, said scanning probe microscope having a probe that includes a base, a cantilever connected to said base, and a tip connected to said cantilever, said scanning probe microscope assembly having a tunneling current mode and an atomic force mode, the method comprising:
inducing and detecting a tunneling current between said tip and said object during said tunneling current mode;
inducing atomic force interaction between said tip and said object and detecting deflection of said cantilever due to said atomic force interaction during said atomic force mode; and
immobilizing said tip with respect to said base so as to prevent said tip from moving toward or away from said object during said tunneling current mode, wherein:
said cantilever has a lower surface to which said tip is connected and an upper surface; and
said immobilizing said tip with respect to said base is accomplished by:
providing an element coupled to said base having a lower surface disposed over said upper surface of said cantilever;
providing a permanent magnet on said lower surface of said element;
providing a coil on said upper surface of said cantilever; and
producing a current in said coil to magnetically hold said cantilever rigid with respect to said base during said tunneling current mode.
2. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
said probe includes a cantilever connected to said tip; and
said non-optical interaction inducing and detecting means includes means for inducing atomic force interaction between said tip and said object and for detecting deflection of said cantilever due to said atomic force interaction.
3. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
4. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
5. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
said tip has a base; and
said scanning probe microscope assembly further comprises a lens disposed over said tip and optically coupled between said light source and said tip for focusing said provided light in said base of said tip.
7. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
8. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
said tip has a base; and
said scanning probe microscope assembly further comprises a lens disposed over said tip and optically coupled between said light source and said tip for focusing said provided light in said base of said tip, said lens also optically coupled between said tip and said photodetector for focusing said captured light for detection by said photodetector.
9. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
10. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
11. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
12. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
said photodiode comprises:
a first doped silicon region in said tip;
a second doped silicon region in said tip oppositely doped to and in contact with said first doped region;
a first conductive region in contact with said first doped region;
a second conductive region in contact with said second doped region;
said photodetector further comprises a photodiode measurement circuit coupled across said first and second conductive regions for making measurements of said captured light detected by said photodiode.
13. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
14. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
17. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
18. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
19. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
20. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
21. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
25. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
said probe includes a cantilever connected to said tip; and
said scanning probe microscope assembly further comprises means for inducing atomic force interaction between said tip and said object and for detecting deflection of said cantilever due to said atomic force interaction.
26. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
27. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
28. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
29. A scanning probe microscope assembly as recited in
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The present invention relates generally to spectrophotometry, near-field microscopy, and scanning probe microscopy. Specifically, it relates to a scanning probe microscope assembly and corresponding method for making spectrophotometric and near-field measurements in addition to conventional scanning probe measurements.
In the past, near-field optical microscopes, such as those described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,604,520, have incorporated spectrophotometer in order to obtain information about the composition of the specimen being examined. However, they are plagued by the extremely slow rate at which the specimen area can be scanned. This problem has severely limited the use of near-field optical microscopes and spectrophotometer for commercially important applications in the biological and industrial fields. In addition, near-field optical microscopes can not achieve the resolution of scanning probe microscopes.
On the other hand conventional scanning probe microscopes, such as scanning tunneling microscopes and atomic force microscopes, have been able to make only limited determinations of the constituents of an object under inspection. Moreover, these conventional scanning probe microscopes cannot define the structure of the object below its surface and cannot define with fine resolution pits, walls, projections, and other structures which prevent the end of the probe tip from coming close enough to the object in these areas for accurate inspection by conventional scanning probe microscopy.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,319,977 describes a scanning probe microscope that utilizes the probe tip to make acoustic microscopy measurements and either atomic force microscopy (AFM) measurements or scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) measurements during the same scanning sequence. The resolution of acoustic microscopy is however rather low in comparison to AFM, STM, or near-field optical microscopy. Moreover, as with conventional scanning probe microscopes, the scanning probe microscope described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,319,977 cannot define those types of structures which prevent the end of the probe tip from coming close enough to the object for accurate inspection.
Furthermore, many objects exhibit areas of varying composition and conductivity. For example, the surface of a semiconductor may change from being conductive to insulative as a function of position. However, no scanning probe microscopes currently exist which are capable of making STM, AFM, near-field optical microscopy, and spectrophotometric measurements during the same scanning sequence in order to properly image and identify such an object.
Moreover, in the past microscope systems for Confocal or Scanning Probe Microscopy have been limited in the tools available for manipulating the 2D, 3D and volume image characteristics they generate.
In addition, they have been limited in the ability (particularly in Scanning Probe Microscopy) to make accurate measurements in x,y, and z directions. In particular it is useful to have accurate position feedback when operating a Scanning Probe Microscope in order to close the control loop in positioning and repositioning the Scanning Probe.
Furthermore the collection of sectional data in volume confocal microscopy has taken substantial amounts of time making some measurements of time varying specimens difficult or impossible.
The foregoing problems are solved by a scanning probe microscope assembly that has an AFM mode, an STM mode, a near-field spectrophotometry mode, a near-field optical mode, and a hardness testing mode for examining an object.
The scanning probe microscope assembly includes a probe having a base. The probe also includes a cantilever connected to the base, a tip connected to the cantilever, and a clamp connected to the base.
The scanning probe microscope assembly is configured to induce atomic force interaction between the tip and the object and to detect deflection of the cantilever due to the atomic force interaction during the AFM.
The scanning probe microscope assembly is also configured to induce and detect a tunneling current between the tip and the object during the STM mode. During the STM mode, the cantilever is held rigid with respect to the base.
The scanning probe microscope assembly includes a spectrophotometer which has a light source optically coupled to the tip. The light source is controlled to provide light to the tip during the spectrophotometry mode. The tip is shaped so that it emits the provided light at the sharp end of the tip. The emitted light then optically interacts with the object. The spectrophotometer includes a photodetector for detecting light that results from the emitted light optically interacting with the object in order to make spectrophotometric measurements of the detected light.
The scanning probe microscope assembly is also configured to rotationally polarize the light provided by the light source of the spectrophotometer during the near-field mode. The scanning probe microscope assembly identifies deep surface features based on the light detected by the photodetector that results from the rotationally polarized light being emitted by the tip and optically interacting with the object.
The scanning probe microscope assembly is also configured to direct the tip to penetrate the object at a specific point with a predefined known force. The light source is controlled to provide light to the tip during the hardness testing mode before and while the tip penetrates the object. The photodetector detects the light that results from the emitted light optically interacting with the object before and while the tip penetrates the object. The scanning probe microscope assembly compares the resulting light detected before the tip penetrates the object with the resulting light detected while the tip penetrates the object to determine the hardness of the object.
The invention will be more readily apparent from the following detailed description and appended claims when taken in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
Referring to
A probe 102 is used to scan the surface of an object 104 in variety of measurement modes, as will be discussed shortly. In the preferred embodiment, the surface of the object 104 is scanned by probe 102 using a conventional piezoelectric XY translator 110 to move the object 104 along the X and Y axes and a conventional piezoelectric Z translator 112 to move the probe 102 along the Z axis. However, those skilled in the art will appreciate that a piezoelectric XYZ translator may be used instead to move the object 104 along the X, Y, and Z axes while the probe 102 remains stationary. Alternatively, a piezoelectric XYZ translator may be used to move the probe 102 along the X, Y, and Z axes while the object 104 remains stationary.
Scanning is controlled by controller or computer 114 based on inputs received from the control terminal 116. During scanning, controller 114 analyzes measurement data and displays measurement information on display monitor 118.
Atomic Force Microscopy Mode
Scanning probe microscope assembly 100 is configured to perform atomic force microscopy (AFM). As will be explained later, the AFM mode may occur when the user has selected the AFM mode with the control terminal 116 and also issues with the control terminal 116 a high magnification zoom control signal received by the CPU 120 for a high magnification scan of the object 104. The scanning control routine 122 stored in the memory 124 and run on the CPU 120 then generates scanning control signals outputted by the CPU 120 for controlling the XY and Z translators 110 and 112 to position probe 102 over the surface of the object 104 for AFM measurements.
Probe 102 includes a base 128 coupled to the Z translator 112, a cantilever 130 integrally connected to the base 128, and a sharp projecting tip 132 integrally connected to the cantilever 130. The scanning control signals generated by the scanning control routine 122 control the XY and Z translators 110 and 112 so that tip 132 is positioned in close proximity to or in contact with the object 104 depending on what type of force interaction between the tip 132 and the object 104 is desired. As a result, the cantilever 130 will be deflected due to a non-optical interaction in the form of an atomic force interaction between the tip 132 and the object 104. As those skilled in the art know, this atomic force interaction may be due to Van der Waals forces, magnetic forces, electrostatic forces, lateral forces, or other related forces.
The deflection of the cantilever 130 representing the atomic force interaction between the tip 132 and the object 104 is optically detected by conventional optics 134. The conventional deflection measurement circuit 136 is coupled to the optics 134. It measures the optically detected deflection and outputs a deflection measurement signal containing data representing the measured deflection. The measured deflection also corresponds to the topography of the object. Thus, the optics 134 and the deflection measurement circuit 135 serve as a cantilever deflection measurer. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that other types of systems may be used to measure deflection of the cantilever 130.
The deflection measurement signal is provided to the CPU 120. The data contained by the signal is analyzed and processed by the AFM analysis routine 137 to produce AFM image data representing a high magnification (or nanoview) image of the topography of the object 104. The display routines 136 then formats the AFM image data, in the way described later, and the CPU 120 provides it to the display monitor 118 for display. The routines 136 and 137 are both stored in the memory 124 and run on the CPU 120.
Scanning Tunneling Microscopy Mode
The scanning probe microscope assembly 100 of
Referring to
In one embodiment, heating elements 148 are disposed on the clamping arm 140 at the action joints 146, as shown in
Alternatively, an electrode 156 may be fixed to the clamping arm 140, as shown in
Similar to the embodiment of
Alternatively, an electrode 157 may be fixed to the clamping structure 141, as shown in
As shown in
Referring to
Alternatively, optically transparent and conductive coil patterns 179 and 181 are respectively formed on the lower surface of lens 174 and the upper surface of the cantilever 130, as shown in
Referring back to
Since tip 132 is coated with a conductive layer, a non-optical interaction in the form of a tunneling current is produced between the tip 132 and the object 104. The tunneling current in the object 104 is detected and measured by the tunneling current measurement circuit 158. In response, the tunneling current measurement circuit 158 outputs a tunneling current measurement signal containing data representing the measured tunneling current. The measured tunneling current corresponds to the topography of the object.
Alternatively, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the tunneling current may be kept fixed by changing the position of tip 132 with the Z axis translator 112. The amount of change in position required to keep the tunneling current constant is the measure of topography of the surface.
The tunneling current signal is provided to the CPU 120. The data contained by the signal is analyzed and processed by the STM analysis routine 138 to produce STM image data representing a high magnification (or nanoview) image of the topography of the object 104. The display routines 136 then formats the STM image data, in the way described later, and the CPU 120 provides it to the display monitor 118 for display. The routine 138 is stored in the memory 124 and run on the CPU 120.
Low Magnification Optical Microscopy Mode
Referring again to
In order to perform low magnification visible optical microscopy, scanning probe microscope assembly 100 includes a conventional, confocal spot scan, or confocal scanning disk visible optical microscope 160 and visible optical camera 162. The visible light source of the microscope 160 illuminates the object 104 with visible light. The portion of visible light which is within the visible field of view of the microscope 160 and reflected by the object 104 and the probe 102 is then received by the microscope 160. This reflected visible light passes through the beam splitter 166 to the filter of the microscope 160 which removes any non-visible components. The filtered visible light is then focused on the camera 162 by the eyepiece (i.e., focusing lens) of microscope 160. The objective of microscope 160 is chosen to provide a numerical aperture in the range of approximately 0.1–0.2 for low magnification (i.e., macroview of) visible images of the object 104.
The camera 162 then converts the focused visible light into a data signal containing data representing the focused visible light. The data contained by the signal is analyzed and processed by the low magnification optical microscopy analysis routine 139 to produce visible image data representing a low magnification (or macroview) visible image of the topography of the object 104. The display routines 136 then formats the visible image data, in the way described later, and the CPU 120 provides it to the display monitor 118 for display. The routine 139 is stored in the memory 124 and run on the CPU 120.
Medium Magnification Optical Microscopy Mode
The scanning probe microscope assembly 100 of
In the case where tip 132 is made of a material, such as silicon, which is opaque to visible light, the scanning control routine 122 generates control signals for controlling the light source 180 to provide a wide beam of infrared light. The light source 180 of the spectrophotometer 182 is configured so that the wavelength (i.e., frequency) and beam size of the light that it provides may be varied in ways well known to those skilled in the art. In the preferred embodiment, this light source 180 is variable in wavelength over the range of approximately 6 microns to 200 nm and has a beam size variation ratio of approximately 1000 to 1 so that the beam can be as made as narrow as the base of the tip 132 (down to 1 micron) and as wide as the largest objective in the system (up to 2 cm).
The wide beam of infrared light is directed by the beam splitters 186 and 188 to the beam splitter 166. The beam splitter 166 reflects (i.e., directs) the wide beam of infrared light to the lens system 174.
As shown in
The lens system 174 may be a standard objective arrangement of one or more lenses to form an appropriate tube length or provide the preferred infinity corrected tube length in a manner well known to lens designers. A two lens system may be made by providing a mounting barrel with a partial or complete hole in the thin support structure. Moreover, as those skilled in the art will appreciate, lens system 174 may be a fresnel lens arrangement constructed similar to the fresnel lens 250 shown in
The lens system support 176 is transparent to visible light and may extend across the entire visible field of the visible optical microscope 160. It may include a cutoff filter such that only visible light may pass through it while infrared light is blocked except in a central area within the lens system 174 where it acts like a field stop (part of standard objective lens design practice and well known in the art) to eliminate extraneous light which would lower contrast in the medium magnification optical mode.
The lens system support 176 may also be an electro-optically adjustable iris, mechanical iris, optically enabled iris, such as a glass assembly made from glass doped everywhere except over lens system 174 which becomes opaque on exposure to UV light from the light source 180, and may be used as a field stop. This is true even when lens system 174 is a fresnel lens arrangement such as that shown in
For the embodiments of
Referring again to
Moreover, lens system 174 occupies only a small area of the visible light field of view of the microscope 160. In particular, lens system 174 has a diameter substantially smaller than the diameter of the objective lens of the microscope 160 shown in
Moreover,
The wide beam of infrared light focused by the lens system 174 at the surface of the object 104 is reflected by the object 104 back to the lens system 174, as shown in
The camera 178 converts the focused infrared light into an infrared data signal containing data representing the focused infrared light. The data contained by the signal is analyzed and processed by the medium magnification optical microscopy analysis routine 141 to produce infrared image data representing a medium magnification (or microview) image of the topography of the object 104. The display routines 136 then formats the infrared image data, in the way described later, and the CPU 120 provides it to the display monitor 118 for display. The routine 141 is stored in the memory 124 and run on the CPU 120.
Alternatively, when the tip 132 is made of a material, such as silicon nitride, which is transparent to visible light, then lens system 174 may be configured and disposed over the tip 132 so that it has a focal length in focus with the surface of the object (and also the sharp end 188 of the tip 132) for a portion 165 of the visible light 164 provided by the visible light source of the microscope 160. Again, the focal length is chosen so that lens system 174 has a numerical aperture in the range of approximately 0.7 to 0.9 to provide medium magnification (i.e., microview on images of the object 104.
The portion 165 of visible light focused by the lens system 174 at the surface of the object 104 is reflected by the object 104 back to the lens system 174. From there, it is directed by the beam splitters 166 and 188 to the optics 168. In this case, the filter of the optics 168 allows only the visible light portion to pass through and be focused by the eyepiece of the optics 168 on the camera 178.
The camera 178 converts the focused visible light 165 into a visible data signal containing data representing the focused visible light. Similar to above, the medium magnification optical microscopy analysis routine 141 produces medium magnification visible image data representing a medium magnification (or microview) image of the topography of the object 104 which is then formatted by the display routines 136 and displayed on the display monitor 118.
Near-Field Spectrophotometry Mode
Referring to
When a near-field spectrophotometric measurement is to be made, scanning control routine 122 will generate scanning control signals outputted by the CPU 120 for controlling the XY and Z translators 110 and 112 to position tip 132 in close proximity to the object 104 for making near-field spectrophotometric measurements. In the preferred embodiment, the sharp end 188 of the tip 132 is placed from the object 104 no further then approximately half of the wavelength of the light provided by the light source 180 for the near-field spectrophotometric mode.
Additionally, scanning control routine 122 generates control signals to control light source 180 to provide a narrow beam of infrared or visible light 185 which is transparent to the probe 102 and the lens system 174. This is done at a variety of chopping frequencies to enable the photodetectors 192 and 194 of the spectrophotometer to discriminate between the detected optical energy due to excitation by the light 185 and detected background energy through lock-in amplification and other noise rejection and amplification methods well known to those in the art. As a result, spectrophotometer 182 may make absorption, Raman, second harmonic, fluorescence, and other well known spectrophotometric measurements of the object 104.
The mechanically rotatable plane polarizer 184 is held stationary in the near-field spectrophotometry mode. The light 185 from the light source 180 is plane polarized by the polarizer 184, passes through the beam splitters 186 and 188, and is directed by the mirror 172 to the lens system 174.
The light 185 is focused by the lens system 174 within the base 178 of the tip 132, as shown in
As was just alluded to, tip 132 acts similar to an antenna. This, the propagation in, emission of, and capture of energy in a pyramid shaped antenna is analogous to that of tip 132 when shaped as a cone or tetrahedral. The propagation, emission, and capture of energy in a pyramid shaped antenna is described in The Radiation Patterns of Dielectric Rods-Experiment and Theory, by R. B. Watson and C. W. Horton, Journal of Applied Physics, volume 19, pg. 661 (1948) and is expressly incorporated by reference herein.
Specifically, the electrical and magnetic fields at the base 178 of tip 132 are analogous to the following equations which define the electrical and magnetic fields at the base of a pyramid shaped antenna:
E0′1=x cos(πy1/b)exp(−j(ωt−k′z1)),
H0′1=[y(k′/ωμ)cos(πy1/b)+z(π/jωμb)sin(πy1/b) ]exp(−j(ωt−k′
where
a and b represent the size of the sides of the base of the pyramid shaped antenna,
k represents the wave number in a vacuum, and
k′ represents the wave number in the material of a waveguide connected to the antenna.
The method employed by Watson and Horton prescribes magnetic currents on the two electrical field plane sides of the pyramid shaped antenna and electric currents on the two magnetic field plane sides. The emitted and captured optical energy is then found by applying a Fresnel-Huygens method to obtain the radiation fields produced by these currents. Adopting spherical geometry, with the z axis corresponding to θ=0, the following fields are obtained:
Er=0,
E0=(jk cos θ)P1(θ,φ)
Eφ=(−jk sin φ cos θ)P1(θ,φ)
where
P1(θ,φ)=M0 cos [(ka/2)sin θ cos φ]·I1·I2
Here n=k/k′ and l is the length of the pyramid shaped antenna in the z direction.
It is clear from the foregoing discussion, that the propagation, emission, and capture of energy described by these equations is analogous to that which occurs in tip 132.
Referring again to
The photodetector 192 converts the detected optical energy (i.e., detected wavelengths) into a detection signal containing data representing the detected optical energy. The data contained by the signal is analyzed and processed by the near-field spectrophotometry analysis routine 143 to produce data representing information on the composition of the object 104. Depending on the particular wavelength of the light 185 provided by the light source 180, the optical interaction between the tip 132 and the object may involve reflection, absorption, photoemission (including fluorescence, Raman, and second harmonic), and/or other types of well known interactions.
As was indicated earlier, the scanning control routine 122 generates control signals for varying the wavelength of the light provided by the light source 180. As a result, the above described interactions may be detected by the photodetector 192 and analyzed by the analysis routine 143 to produce data representing information on the composition of the object 104. The data is then formatted for display, in the way described later, by the display routines 136 and provided to the display monitor 119 for display of this information.
Alternatively, or in conjunction with the near-field spectrophotometric arrangement described above, scanning probe microscope assembly 100 of
Photodetector 194 converts the detected optical energy into a detection signal containing data representing the detected optical energy. The data contained by the detection signal is provided to the CPU 120 and analyzed and processed by the near-field spectrophotometry analysis routine 147 to produce data representing information on the composition of the object 104. This data is formatted by the display routines 136, in the way described later, and provided to the display monitor 119 for display of the information.
Near-Field Optical Microscopy Mode
Turning again to
As was just alluded to, this mode is used when the AFM or STM measurements indicate that tip 132 is not directly over a structure of the object 104 and is instead directly over a deep surface feature, such as a pit, wall, or projection. When this occurs, optical interaction between tip 132 and the object 104 is induced in the same way as was described earlier for the near-field spectrophotometry mode except that scanning control routine 122 issues a control signal for controlling the rotatable plane polarizer 184 to rotate during this mode. As a result, the light is rotationally plane polarized (i.e., the polarization state of the light provided by the light source 180 is continuously changed) during the near-field optical mode.
The optical energy pattern detected by the photodetector 192 or 194 during this rotation is recorded by the near-field optical analysis routine 151. The routine 151 then compares the recorded optical energy pattern with predefined optical energy patterns stored in the data base 198 of the memory 124 which correspond to various types of deep surface features. This comparison is made in order to determine what is directly underneath or near tip 132. The analysis routine 151 then generates image data representing an image of the determined deep surface feature and the display routines 136 formats the data for display of this image on the display monitor 118.
Moreover, this type of near-field microscopy may be used to examine tip 132 in a tip testing mode. This is done by placing tip 132 over a uniform and already defined hole in an object. By comparing the optical energy pattern detected by the photodetector 192 or 194 with a predefined optical energy pattern stored in the data base 198 for a non-defective tip, the analysis routine 151 can determine whether tip 132 is defective or not.
Alternatively, rather than utilizing the rotatable linear polarizer 184, those skilled in the art will recognize that scanning probe microscope assembly 100 may be configured so that the plane polarizer 184 is stationary and probe 102 is rotated by rotating the Z translator 112 in a conventional manner during this mode. Alternatively, object 104 may be rotated by rotating the XY translator 110 in a conventional manner during this mode. As a result, an optical energy pattern detected by the photodetector 192 or 194 during such rotation can be compared with predefined optical energy patterns stored in the data base 198.
Hardness Testing Mode
The scanning probe microscope assembly 100 of
In the hardness testing mode, the scanning control routine 122 controls the making of a near-field spectrophotometric measurement in the way described earlier at a particular location of the object 104. A detection signal is provided to the CPU 120 by the photodetector 192 or 194 and the hardness testing analysis routine 195 records in the data base 198 the data of the detection signal representing the optical energy detected by the photodetector 192 or 194. The routine 195 is stored in the memory 124 and run on the CPU 120.
Then, the scanning control routine 122 generates scanning control signals for controlling the Z translator 112 so that tip 132 directly contacts, penetrates, and deforms the surface of the object 104 with a known force at the same location where the near-field spectrophotometric measurement was just made. While the tip 132 penetrates the surface of the object, scanning control routine 122 then controls the making of another near-field spectrophotometric measurement at the same location.
The data contained in the resulting detection signal provided by the photodetector 192 or 194, together with the earlier recorded data, is analyzed and processed by the hardness testing analysis routine 195 to produce data representing information on the hardness of the object 104. This is done by determining the proportionate change in the detected optical energy between the two measurements which provides a measure of the depth of penetration of tip 132. The depth of penetration in turn is a measure of the local binding strength (i.e., hardness) of the object 104. In bulk materials, this measure reflects local changes such as crystal dislocations, etc . . . . In patterned materials, such as semiconductors, this measure provides subsurface structural information. This data is formatted by the display routines 136, in the way described later, and provided to the display monitor 119 for display of the hardness information.
Alternatively, the hardness testing mode may involve STM measurements. In this variation, the scanning control routine 122 controls the tunneling current measurement circuit 158 to make a conductivity measurement for object 104 at a particular location of the object 104 in a similar way to that described earlier for STM measurements. The data in the conductivity measurement signal representing the conductivity measured by the circuit 158 is recorded in the data base 198 by the hardness testing analysis routine 195.
Similar to before, the scanning control routine 122 generates scanning control signals for controlling the Z translator 112 to make the tip 132 directly contact, penetrate, and deform the surface of the object 104 with a known force at the same location. While the tip 132 penetrates the surface of the object 104, scanning control routine 122 then controls the making of conductivity measurements of object 104 at the same location.
The data in the conductivity signal over the period before and during the penetration is recorded, analyzed, and processed by the hardness testing analysis routine 195 to produce data representing information on the hardness of the object 104. In this case, the measured change in conductivity over the period before and during penetration is a measure of the depth of penetration of tip 132 and in turn a measure of the hardness of the object 104. The data produced by the routine 195 is formatted by the display routines 136 and provided to the display monitor 119 for display of the hardness information.
Additionally, the actual deflection or motion of the tip as measured by the optics 134 and the deflection measurement circuit 136 can be used by the hardness testing routine 195 in conjunction with the known force to provide a measure of the hardness of the surface. Like in the earlier described hardness testing embodiments, the data produced by the routine 195 is formatted by the display routines 136 and provided to the display monitor 119 for display of the hardness information.
Probe and Lens Composition
In order to provide all of the foregoing modalities associated with the embodiment of
The base 128, cantilever 130, tip 132, and clamping arm 140 or clamping structure 141 of probe 102 are etched from the wafer using conventional techniques known to those skilled in the art.
The lens system 174 may also be formed from silicon, silicon nitride, or some other material transparent to infrared or visible light depending on whether infrared or visible light is used for the modes just described above. Similarly, depending on whether infrared or visible light is used for these modes, the lens system support 176 of the embodiment of
As shown in
To allow operation in the STM mode and/or contain light energy within the tip 132, the tip 132 may be coated using conventional techniques with a thin layer 304 of a conductive material, such as aluminum, tungsten, or gold. This layer 308 is formed over the core material 300 and any obdurate coating 301 at a thickness in the range of approximately 1 Angstrom to 1 micron.
A small portion of the conductive layer 304 is removed or rubbed off at the sharp end 188 of the tip 132 using conventional techniques to at least the point where the conductive layer 304 is no longer opaque to light propagating through the tip 132. Furthermore, the conductive coating 304 is removed or rubbed off only so that the conductive coating 304 ends approximately 5 to 10 nm from the point of the sharp end 188. As a result, an aperture having a diameter in the range of approximately 5 to 100 nm is formed at the sharp end 188.
Alternatively, referring to
Furthermore, if the obdurate coating 301 of
In the case where the obdurate coating 301 of
First the wafer containing the probe 102 is placed in a vacuum arc deposition chamber containing carbon. A mask is placed over the probe 102 so that only the tip 132 and the area of the cantilever 130 around the base 178 of the tip 132 are exposed. At a pressure of approximately 1×10−7 to 1×10−11, the carbon is heated to a temperature of approximately 2100 to 3000° C. The carbon condenses on the surface of the core material 300 or an overlying tungsten, silicon carbide or silicon nitride layer.
The probe 102 is then placed in a methane hydrogen atmosphere for chemical vapor deposition (CVD) growth of the diamond layer 301 on the surface of the core material 300. The condensed carbon acts as a seed such that the diamond layer 301 grown is a layer of polycrystalline diamond oriented normal to the surface of the core material 300 or overlying layer.
In the case where the obdurate layer 301 is carbon nitride, the same seeding process as was described above is used. Then the probe 102 is placed in an atmosphere of monatomic nitrogen. The monatomic nitrogen is obtained by passing nitrogen gas through a hollow tungsten heater consisting of a hollow tungsten structure through which an electric current is passed. The tungsten heater is maintained at a temperature of 2100 to 3000° C. In one embodiment the tungsten heater also includes a quantity of carbon sufficient to combine chemically to form the carbon nitride layer 301 on the carbon condensation at the cool core material 300 surface (800° C.). The process begins without introducing nitrogen gas. After a few atoms of carbon are deposited, the nitrogen gas is introduced into the tungsten electrode and deposition and growth of the polycrystalline carbon nitride layer 301 is initiated.
The core material 300 or an overlying tungsten, silicon carbide or silicon nitride layer at the sharp end 188 is pushed into or rubbed on a surface containing fine grain diamond (such as a lap or polycrystalline diamond coated surface). The sharp end 188 picks up a seed crystals of diamond. The probe 102 is then placed in a CVD environment for growth of the polycrystalline diamond layer 301 at the seed sites around the sharp end 188.
Scanning Sequence
Initially, the user issues with the control terminal 116 a low magnification zoom control signal for directing a low magnification visible optical microscopy scan of the object 104. In response, the scanning control routine 122 controls the XY translator 110 to position the object in the area specified by the low magnification zoom control signal and then low magnification visible optical microscopy measurements are made in these areas in the way described earlier (block 200). This is done in order that the user may find an area of the object 104 to zoom in on for closer inspection with some of the other modes described earlier.
Referring to
In the case where the upper and lower bounds 502 and 504 are determined by the scanning control routine 122, the scanning control routine 122 controls the making of sample confocal microscopy measurements of the object 104 at low and high levels in the z direction. To do so, the scanning control routine 122 generates control signals to control the translator 110 for positioning the object in the x,y plane and generates control signals to control the optics of the microscope 160 for adjusting the confocal region (focal plane) in the z direction. However, those skilled in the art will appreciate that a translator that positions an object in each of the x,y, and z directions could also be used. The scanning control routine 122 then determines from the sample measurements the upper and lower bounds 502 and 504 (z2 and z1) of the object 104 and also the average diameter (n) of the smallest feature detected with the sample measurements.
Based on the upper and lower bounds z2 and z1 and the average diameter n of the smallest feature, the scanning control routine 122 determines in a binary tree the confocal regions in the z direction at which confocal microscopy measurements will be made. Specifically, the scanning control routine 122 determines that the confocal regions for the object 104 will be at z1, z2, (z2−z1)/2, (z2−z1)/2+(z2−z1)/4, (z2−z1)/2−(z2−z1)/4,. . . (z2−z1)/2+(z2−z1)/4+ . . . (z2−z1)/2n, (z2−z1)/2−(z2−z1)/4− . . . (z2−z1)/2n. Thus, the resolution of the scanning technique and number of confocal regions that will be scanned is the closest whole number to (z2−z1)/2n. These z values are then recorded in a table in the data base 198 shown in
Referring to
In the case where the microscope 160 is a spot scanning confocal microscope, then the scanning control routine 122 uses the table to generate control signals to control the translator 110 and the optics of the microscope 16 for making confocal microscopy measurements at each confocal region in the table but only within the bounded area in the x,y plane which the table specifies for it. Moreover, if the microscope 160 is a scanning disk confocal microscope, the scanning control routine 122 will generate control signals for controlling the optics of the microscope 160 to make confocal microscopy measurements at each confocal region in the table and controlling the camera 162 to only take measurement data for the bounded area in the x,y plane which the table specifies for it.
Thus, the table is used to limit the confocal microscopy scan to those areas where most of the object 104 lies. This reduces substantially the time, hardware, and storage requirements needed to acquire a three dimensional confocal image.
Those skilled in the art will recognize that the described scanning technique may be modified to collect information in bounded sections aligned in z,x or z,y planes or in bounded spherical or other non-cartesian sections. In particular when working with simple high numerical aperture optics (in reflection or refraction) images are formed with substantial spherical (or some cases cylindrical) aberration, by using a matching spherical aperture (in spot or scanning disk confocal microscopy) or an image sensor with a spherical surface which matches the spherical aberration of the optics substantial cost and performance benefits may be obtained.
Once an area for inspection is located with the low magnification confocal microscopy scan, then the user issues with control terminal 116 a medium magnification zoom control signal for directing a medium magnification optical microscopy scan of the object 104 in this area. The scanning control routine 122 controls the XY translator 110 to position the tip 132 over the object 104 in the area specified by the zoom control signal and then medium magnification optical microscopy measurements are made in this area in the way described earlier (block 202). This is done to find a smaller area to zoom in on for even closer inspection.
After this smaller inspection area is located, the user issues with control terminal 116 a high magnification zoom control signal for directing a high magnification scan of the object 104 in this area. In doing so, the scanning control routine 122 controls the XY translator 110 so that the tip 132 is sequentially positioned at numerous scan points over the object 104 during the scan.
Referring to
After this smaller inspection area is located, the user issues with control terminal 116 a high magnification zoom control signal for directing a high magnification scan of the object 104 in this area using the various high magnification scanning probe microscopy (AFM, STM, spectrophotometric, near-field optical, and hardness testing) modes described earlier. In doing so, the scanning control routine 122 controls the XY translator 110 so that the tip 132 is sequentially positioned at numerous scan points over the object 104 during the scan.
When the AFM mode has been selected as the primary high magnification mode by the user with the control terminal 116, a flag is set in the data base 198 indicating this. In response to this flag, the scanning control routine 122 directs the Z translator 110 to position tip 132 over the object 104 for an AFM measurement at each scan point in the way described earlier (block 206). The data processed by the AFM analysis routine 137 representing these AFM measurements is then recorded in the data base 198.
Alternatively, when object 104 is a conductive material, the user may select the STM mode as the primary high magnification mode. In this case, the scanning control routine 122, in response to a flag stored in the data base 198 indicating that the STM mode is the primary high magnification mode, directs the Z translator 110 to position tip 132 over the object 104 at each scan point for an STM measurement at each scan point (block 206). These STM measurements are made in the way described earlier and the combined data representing them is processed by the STM analysis routine 138 and recorded in the data base 198. When combined, the recorded data provides the basic high magnification image data of object 104.
After a primary high magnification measurement is made at a scan point, the scanning control routine 122 determines whether to make at this same scan point a secondary high magnification STM measurement (in the case where the primary high magnification mode is the AFM mode) or AFM measurement (in the case where the primary high magnification mode is the STM mode). The scanning control routine 122 accomplishes this by determining if a predefined number N of scan points have occurred since the last secondary STM measurement (in the case where the primary high magnification mode is the AFM mode) or the last secondary AFM measurement (in the case where the primary high magnification mode is the STM mode) (decision block 208). This predefined number N may be selected by the user with the control terminal 116.
If scanning control routine 122 determines that the scan has been incremented by N scan points since the last secondary high magnification STM or AFM measurement, then it controls the making of such a measurement in the way described earlier (block 210). The data representing this measurement is processed by the STM or AFM analysis routines 137 or 138 and then stored in the data base 198. This data provides additional information or image data on local variations of composition or conductivity at the current scan point.
After the secondary measurement has been made at the current scan point, or after scanning control routine 122 determines that such a measurement should not be made at this scan point, it then determines based on the primary high magnification AFM or STM measurement whether a deep surface feature is immediately under the tip 132 if it already has not determined that an anomaly exists at the current scan point (decision block 212). Similar to the way in which an anomaly is detected, this is done by analyzing the data contained in the signal received from the cantilever deflection measurement circuit 135 (when the AFM mode is the primary magnification mode) or the tunneling current measurement circuit 158 (when the STM mode is the primary magnification mode) and comparing it with predefined data stored in memory 124 corresponding to a deep surface feature.
If scanning control routine 122 determines that the received data does not compare with the stored data, then it has determined that a structure and not a deep surface feature is directly underneath tip 132. In this case, a near-field optical measurement is not made.
However, when the received data does compare to the stored data, then scanning control routine 122 has determined that a deep surface feature is underneath tip 132 at the current scan point. In this case, the scanning control routine 122 then controls the making of a near-field optical microscopy measurement at this scan point in the way described earlier (block 214). The data produced by the near-field optical analysis routine 151 provides image data identifying the deep surface structure and is recorded in the data base 198.
After a near-field optical measurement has been made at the current scan point, or if it is determined that such a measurement is not to be made, then the scanning routine 122 determines whether a junction of surface structures or local change in surface structure exists at the current scan point (decision block 216). Similar to the deep surface feature determination described above, scanning control routine 122 determines this by analyzing the data contained in the signal received from the cantilever deflection measurement circuit 135 (when the AFM mode is the primary magnification mode) or the tunneling current measurement circuit 158 (when the STM mode is the primary magnification mode) and comparing it with predefined data stored in memory 124 corresponding to known types of structure junctions to determine if a structure junction is directly underneath tip 132.
If scanning control routine 122 determines that a junction of structures or a local change in structure is directly underneath tip 132, then it controls performance of a near-field spectrophotometric measurement, and/or a hardness testing measurement in the ways described earlier (block 218). The data produced by the analysis routines 143, 149, and 195 provides even more information or image data on local variations of composition at the current scan point and is recorded in the data base 198.
After a near-field spectrophotometric measurement, and/or a hardness testing measurement is made, or if scanning control routine 122 determines that a junction of structures or a local variation in structure is under tip 132 at the current scan point, then the scanning control routine 122 determines if the scan has been completed. This is done by determining if the current scan point is the last scan point of a predefined number of scan points M selected for the entire scan by the user with the control terminal 116.
If the current scan point is not the Mth scan point, then the scan is incremented to the next scan point and the above process is repeated until the Mth scan point is reached. However, if the current scan point is the Mth scan point, then the display routines 136 combine the data processed by the routines 137, 138, 151, 143, and 195 into a single high magnification image of the object in the way described later (block 220).
As one skilled in the art will appreciate, the user can increase the overall scan time by selectively setting flags in the data base 198 indicating which of the above described measurements should not be made during the scan. In response, the scanning control routine 122 will not control the performance of these types of measurements.
Moreover, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the scanning control routine 122 can be modified to make different types of measurements for different types of conditions and materials being inspected.
For example, the near-field optical mode, the near-field spectrophotometry mode, or the hardness testing mode may be made the primary measurement mode.
Or, scanning control routine 122 may also determine that secondary STM or AFM, near-field optical, spectrophotometric, or hardness testing measurements should be made if, based on the primary high magnification AFM or STM measurement, scanning control routine 122 determines that an anomaly exists at a current scan point. This is done similarly to the deep surface feature determination. Specifically, scanning control routine 122 analyzes the data contained in the signal received from the cantilever deflection measurement circuit 135 (when the AFM mode is the primary magnification mode) or the tunneling current measurement circuit 158 (when the STM mode is the primary magnification mode) and compares it with predefined data stored in memory 124 corresponding to known types of structures and surface features to determine if an anomaly is directly underneath tip 132.
Moreover, the criterion for making the various types of measurements described above may be based instead on the planarity of the specimen. Thus, the scanning control routine 122 would control the making of measurements in the magnification and measurement mode appropriate to the region under the tip 132. For example, scanning control routine 122 may control the transitioning from measurements in the low magnification optical mode for a rapidly changing topography (e.g., 2 to 3 microns) to measurements in the high magnification AFM and/or STM mode for a region (e.g., n on a side) which might be expected to be locally planar, atomic, and/or conductive.
Display Control
The display routines 136 first obtain the zoom (i.e., magnification) level desired by the user (block 230). The user requests the zoom level with control terminal 116 which issues a zoom level command signal containing data representing the desired zoom level. This signal is received by the CPU 120 and the display routines 136 in response obtain the desired zoom level.
The display routines 136 then determine the desired zoom level from the data contained in the received zoom level command signal (block 232).
If the desired zoom level is a low magnification zoom level, then display routines 136 format the visible optical image data provided by the visible optical microscopy analysis routine 139 (block 234). This formatted data is then provided to the display monitor for display of the represented image (block 236).
If the desired zoom level is a medium or high magnification zoom level, then display routines 136 first obtain the hues of the low magnification visible optical image data provided by the visible optical microscopy analysis routine 139 (blocks 238 and 240).
In the case of a medium magnification zoom level, display routines 136 use the visible optical image hues to format the infrared optical image data provided by the optical microscopy analysis routine 141 so that it has a color pattern consistent with the visible optical image (block 242). The formatted data is then provided to the display monitor 118 for display of the represented image (block 244).
In the case of a high magnification zoom level, as was suggested earlier, display routines 136 overlays and combines the recorded image data representing the various measurements made during the high magnification scan into a single high magnification image of the object 104 using conventional data processing techniques (block 246). In this way, the data produced by the AFM or STM analysis routines 137 or 138 representing the primary high magnification measurements provides the basic image data. This basic image data is augmented with data produced by the near-field optical analysis routine 151 providing image data on deep surface features. It is also augmented with data produced by the STM or AFM analysis routines 138 or 137 representing the secondary high magnification measurements and providing image data on local variations in the composition or conductivity of object f04. Moreover, the basic image data is augmented with data produced by the spectrophotometric and hardness testing analysis routines 143, 149, and 195 providing further image data on local variations of the composition of object 104.
After the single high magnification image is produced by the display routines 136, they use the visible optical image hues to format the single image so that it has a color pattern consistent with the visible optical image (block 248). Where the visible optical image color differences are smaller than the infrared optical image gray scale differences, intermediate hues are created by display routines 136 around the visible optical image hues using the visible optical image hues as the center for variation. The formatted data is then provided to the display monitor 118 for display of the represented image (block 250).
Since scanning probe microscope assembly 100 is configured to produce high, medium, and low magnification images with a consistent color pattern, the user is provided with continuous single image zoom.
As shown in
When the zoom level specifies the low magnification confocal microscopy mode or the medium magnification optical microscopy mode, the data formatting routine 520 formats the data provided by the low magnification analysis routine 139 or the medium magnification analysis routine 141. Depending on the zoom level and type of image requested by the user with the control terminal 116, the data formatting routine 520 formats the data for display as a 3D or 2D image of at least a portion of the object 104.
Similarly, when the zoom level specifies the high magnification microscopy mode, the data formatting routine 520 overlays and combines the recorded image data representing the various measurements made during the high magnification scan into a single high magnification 3D or 2D image of at least a portion of the object 104 depending on the desired image type requested by the user. This is done using conventional data processing techniques, as suggested earlier. In this way, the data produced by the AFM or STM analysis routines 137 or 138 representing the primary high magnification measurements provides the basic image data. This basic image data is augmented with data produced by the near-field optical analysis routine 151 providing image data on deep surface features. It is also augmented with data produced by the STM or AFM analysis routines 138 or 137 representing the secondary high magnification measurements and providing image data on local variations in the composition or conductivity of object 104. Moreover, the basic image data is augmented with data produced by the spectrophotometric and hardness testing analysis routines 143 and 195 providing further image data on local variations of the composition of object 104.
The display 118 then receives the formatted image data from the CPU 120. In response, it then displays the formatted image data.
Referring again to
Specifically, as shown in
The generated color mapping tool 523a includes a histogram 524a of the image data of the image 522a. The histogram 524a sorts all of the topographic data points of the image data by their heights in the z direction (i.e., z values). The vertical axis of the histogram 524a is a linear range of the z values bounded by the max and min values 525a. The horizontal axis indicates for each z value how many data points of the image data have that z value.
The color mapping tool 523a also includes a vertical color strip (or bar or pallette) 526a that identifies a range of colors. The color mapping tool 523a initially (in the default condition) maps each z value in the histogram 524a to a corresponding color in the color strip 526a over a predetermined range of colors in the color strip 526a. The color mapping tool routine 521 provides the color assignments to the data formatting routine 520 which formats the image data for display of the image 522a with these color assignments.
As shown in
Although a conventional 24 bit display can display 16 million colors, the color strip 526a in
Furthermore, the base color strip 530 may be configured such that each individual color is layered sequentially in the color strip 530 as a darkened version of the color below the color below a lightened version of the color. This forms color bars each having corresponding z values such that image 522b is composed of a series of bars of dark and light colors making a topographic image of the surface of object 104. Since each color bar has a specific linear incremental z value corresponding to it, it represents a precise measure of the change in the z direction of the image 522b.
Alternatively, as shown in
Turning to
Specifically, as shown in
The 3D surface measuring tool routine 532 is responsive to commands issued with the pointing device 117 such that a user can select and manipulate the end points 536 of the cutting plane 534 to position the cutting plane with respect to the image 533. When selected, the end points 536 of the cutting plane 534 are circular magnifying cursers with crosshairs (similar to that shown in
After the cutting plane 534 is positioned by the user with the pointing device 117, the 3D surface measuring tool routine 532 generates cross section data corresponding to the cross section of the image 533 along the intersection of the cutting plane 534 and the image 533. Referring to
The cross section formatting routine 537 includes a 2D cross sectional image 538 along the intersection of the cutting plane 534 and the image 533. The cross section formatting routine 537 includes the surface height difference 539 at the end points 536 of the cutting plane 534, the absolute length 540 of the cutting plane 534 in the x,y plane, and the length 541 of a line extending between the surface points of the cross sectional image 538 at the end points 536 in terms of the x,y,z coordinates.
Moreover, the cross sectional information 537 includes cursers 542 and 543 to make absolute and relative measurements of the separation and angle of surface points intersection or interior points. The 3D surface measuring tool 533 is responsive to commands issued with the pointing device 117 such that a user can manipulate the cursers 542 to make absolute and relative measurements of the difference in z values, separation in the x,y plane, and angle between surface points of the image 538.
The 3D surface measuring tool routine 532 generates cross section cursor data representing the measurements made with the cursers 542. The cross section cursor data is formatted for display by the data formatting routine 520 and provided by the CPU 120 to the display 118 for display of the cross section cursor information 543 including the measurements 548 made with the 542. The cross section cursor information 543 may also be displayed in window fashion along with the 3D surface image 533 and the cross section information 537.
Turning to
The cutting plane 546 of the 3D volume measuring tool routine 544 is positioned by the user with the pointing device 117 in the same way as with the 3D surface measuring tool 532. After the cutting plane 546 is positioned, the portion of the image 545 between the user's viewpoint and the cutting plane 546 is made transparent with only the silhouette of its surface visible to the user. Furthermore, after the cutting plane 546 is positioned, the 3D volume measuring tool routine 544 also generates cross section data corresponding to the cross section of the image 545 at the intersection of the cutting plane 546 and the image 545. However, in this case the cross section data includes information about interior data points of the cross section. Referring to
As shown in
As shown in
Similar to the cutting planes 534 and 546 of the 3D measuring tool routines 532 and 544, the end points 550 of the ruler 549 are magnifying cursers with crosshairs when selected by the user with the pointing device 117. Thus, the ruler may be positioned in the same way as was described for the cutting planes 534 and 546. After the ruler 549 is positioned, the 2D measuring tool routine 548 generates cross section data corresponding to the cross section of the image 547 along the inner region 551 of the ruler 549. This cross section data is generated, displayed, and measured in the same manner as that described earlier for the cross section data 537 shown in
The display routines 136 also include a 2D angle measuring tool routine 552 for measuring angles between points of a 2D image. As shown in
As with each ruler 549, the end points 550 of the ruler 549 are magnifying cursers with crosshairs when selected by the user with the pointing device 117. Thus, the end points 554 may be positioned in the same way as was described for the end points 550 of the ruler 549. After the end points 550 are positioned, the 2D angle tool 552 generates angle data representing the angle formed between the inner regions of the two rulers of the angle measurer 553. The angle data may then be generated and displayed like the cursor data 543 of
The program used to implement the 3D surface measuring tool routine 532, the 3D volume measuring tool routine 544, the 2D measuring tool routine 548, and the 2D angle measuring tool routine 552 is listed in Appendix B.
The display routines 136 further include a Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) routine 560 for filtering a 3D image, such as image 533 or 545 shown in
Referring to
In the 3D FFT image 563, each FFT node of the 2D FFT is a peak whose height (in z) is directly related to its magnitude (or intensity). Thus, the 3D image 563 may then be colored using the color mapping tool routine 521 described earlier. In this way, low magnitudes are colored darker than greater magnitudes so as to establish a floor above which are the principle peaks (FFT nodes) of the original space domain image 561. The FFT routine 560 then makes an individual inverse transform of the data group representing each light colored peak region above the floor which are then all linearly summed together with a single inverse transform of the data group representing all the dark colored regions below the floor to form the 3D image 567 in
The FFT tool routine 560 generates data representing a control panel. The data is formatted by the data formatting routine and the control panel 564 is displayed by the display 118 as shown in
Additionally, with the pointing device 117, the user can select or create regions (or masks) of the 2D FFT image 562 covering specific spatial frequencies so that structures of spatial frequency within the region can be selected for filtering or amplification by the user. The 2D FFT tool generates the data representing a region and the data formatting routine 520 formats the data so that the region 568 is projected on the 2D FFT image 562 by the display 118. The user then changes the inverse transform data group for the region by using the pointing device 117 to manipulate the control bar 565 of the control panel 564 to increase or decrease the magnitude of the spatial elements within the created region and the control bar 566 to vary the phase of the spatial elements within the created region. Thus, the user can create any shape or number of regions on the 2D FFT in which the magnitudes and phases can be varied continuously. In addition the 2D FFT is calibrated in spacial frequencies each of which are displayed next to the 2D FFT so that structures of specific frequency can be selected while all others are de-emphasized or eliminated.
Furthermore once created the regions 568 form separate FFT masks which can be stored and recalled in data base 198 by the user for reuse with other images in which the regions will automatically size themselves to conform to the spacial characteristics of the new image. That is the regions forming the mask carry the specific spacial frequency information they were formed with and scale according to the range of the image to which they are applied. Thus if a region spanned 2 units square on a ten unit image it would scale down linearly for a 100 unit image and up linearly for a 5 unit image. Therefore these regions have a radial mirrored symmetry directly related to the mirror symmetry of the FFT.
Scaling Display Images
Referring again to
Specifically, to do this, scanning control routine 122 controls the making of scanning probe microscopy measurements along one or more (i.e., 1 to N) cross sectional scans of object 104. Each cross sectional scan can be made in the manner described earlier with a combination of different types of scanning probe microscopy measurements at various scan points, or with other combinations of these scanning probe microscopy measurements, or with just AFM or STM measurements alone. In fact, AFM measurements are particularly suited to accurately resolving the edges of structures on object 104.
From the scanning probe measurements, the appropriate ones of the scanning probe microscopy analysis routines 137, 138, 143, and 151 generate data that is formatted by the display formatter 520 to produce scanning probe image data of the portion of the object covered by the scanning probe microscopy measurements. From this scanning probe image data, the display formatter 520 computes, for selected structures of the object 104 characteristic parameters (i.e., indicia or dimensions) of the structure which are accurately resolvable by the scanning probe microscopy measurements. For example, the width or length from edge to edge of the structure along the center cross sectional scan and the average width or length from edge to edge and standard deviation over all of the cross sectional scans could be computed. Similarly, the height from the top to bottom of the structure along the center cross sectional scan and the average height and standard deviation over all of the cross sectional scans could be computed.
At the same time, the scanning control routine 122 controls the making of low magnification optical microscopy mode scan of the entire object 104. The analysis routine 139 generates data from the optical microscopy measurements that is formatted into optical image data by the display formatter 520. The display formatter 520 then uses the measurements made during this scan to compute the same parameters for the same structures as were computed using the scanning probe microscopy measurements. The data formatter 520 then compares the two sets of computed parameters and computes a scale (i.e., calibration, correction, or adjustment) factor for scaling (i.e., calibrating, correcting, or adjusting) the optical image data of these structures.
In one approach, the scale factors would be computed for a large number of structures of the object 104. Then, the data formatter would correspondingly scale the optical image data for each structure based on the correction factor computed for it.
Alternatively, the predefined minimum height could be set high so that scale factors would be computed for only the highest structures of the object 104 in certain regions. Then, the scanning probe microscopy measurements over the cross sectional scans could be used by the data formatter 520 to identify the boundary of the regions or areas which include these structures and have the same overall approximate surface roughness. Since the surface roughness is a measure of (i.e., correlated to) the albedo (i.e., reflectivity) of the surface, the computed scale factors can be used to correspondingly scale the optical image data for each region (including the corresponding structure within the region for which the scale factor was computed).
Of course, either of these two approaches can be used regionally for the object 104 such that the predefined minimum height selected for each region is different. Moreover, these approaches can be used regionally in combination such that one approach may be used for some regions while the other approach is used for other regions.
The selective use of scanning probe microscopy with optical microscopy can be used to substantially reduce the overall time needed to conduct a scan of an object. Specifically, although a confocal optical microscopy scan of an entire object takes about 1/30 to 1/60 of a second, a typical AFM or STM scan of an entire object takes about 1 to 2 minutes. Thus, by using scanning probe images of selected portions of an object developed with AFM and/or STM measurements to accurately scale an overall image of the object developed with confocal optical measurements in the manner just described, the overall scan time for scanning an object to develop an accurate image of the object can be significantly reduced.
Furthermore, as indicated earlier, AFM and STM alone cannot define with fine resolution walls of structures which prevent the end of the probe tip 132 from coming close enough to the object in these areas for accurate inspection. As a result, the angle of the walls of the object 104 may not be accurately represented by the scanning probe image of the object 104 when only AFM and/or STM measurements are being used. However, the angle of the walls are accurately represented in the optical image of the object 104 because measurements made during a scan with optical microscopy accurately resolve or identify the walls of the object 104. Therefore, particular portions of the scanning probe image of the object 104 can be scaled by using particular portions of the optical image.
Specifically, wall angles in the optical image data may be used directly to replace those wall angles in the scanning probe image whenever the wall angles approach or exceed the predetermined angle of the tapered tip 132. For example, this will occur when the bottom portion of a hole has a diameter that approaches the diameter of the tip 132 or when the height change of a structure (i.e., wall) defines an angle that approaches or exceeds the predetermined angle of the tip 132. This sufficiently eliminates the tip angle/wall angle interaction in scanning probe microscopy when only AFM and/or STM is used.
In operation, the data formatter 520 computes from the optical image data the wall angle for structures whose height changes rapidly enough to define an angle that approaches or exceeds the angle of the tapered tip 132. The computed angles for these structures are then used to scale or correct the corresponding angles in the scanning probe image data.
Furthermore, the resolution in terms of heights of structures of the scanning probe image data is very accurate. But, the accuracy of these heights may not be as accurate because of drift in the Z piezoelectric translator 112 due to hysterisis, the motion of the tip 132 actually being an arc, temperature and humidity.
Thus, an optical interferomic measure of height in Z using the Mach Zender arrangement described earlier between two areas on the object 104 may be used as a reference to scale the scanning probe microscopy heights obtained directly from the same surface areas. Specifically, the data formatter 520 takes the heights determined by the scanning control routine 122 during the scanning probe microscopy scan over these areas and computes an average height between the two areas. The data formatter 520 than compares this average height to the average height it computes between these same areas using the scanning probe image data and then computes a scale factor. The scale factor is then applied to all of the scanning probe image data to scale the heights of all structures of the scanning probe image data.
Establishing Safe Heights for AFM and/or STM Operation
Additionally, the optical image of the regions of interest or the entire object 104 may be used to create a known height map of a safe non-measurement making height or heights at which the tip 132 may be moved without mechanical interference with the object 104 when not actually making measurements of the object 104 during a scanning probe microscopy scan. Specifically, the scanning control routine 122 takes the optical image data developed during a optical microscopy mode and constructs a height map. It then controls positioning of the tip 132 when not making measurements during a scanning probe microscopy scan so that it is always as close as reasonably possible to the surface of the object 104 without interfering with it. By operating the tip 132 at the safe non-measurement making height(s), the tip 132 can be lowered from the safe height(s) to the measurement making heights for actually making measurements with the tip 132 during the scanning probe microscopy modes. Thus the total time of any scan which normally includes substantial time for lowering the tip into proximity to the surface can be substantially reduced.
Closed Feedback Loop Scanning
As shown in
Detector 401 splits the collected light into light beams of the constituent colors of the lasers with appropriate filters. It then combines each split light beam with the light from the corresponding one of the light guides 402–404 and provides the each combined light beam to an independent high gain photodetector (such as a photomultplier). The data output of the photodetectors is provided to the scanning control routine 122 which calculates the position of the tip 132 in X, Y, and Z based on the interferometric characteristics (i.e., intensity) of the combined light beams represented by the data provided by the photodetectors.
Alternatively, only one of the light sources 405–407 could be used and mirrors implemented so that the light provided by the light source is shone in the X, Y, and Z directions at different time periods. The light captured with the tip 132 during each time period is combined with the light picked off by the corresponding one of the light guides 402–404 to provide an interferometric measure of the position in X, Y, and Z.
In either case, scanning control routine 122 can reposition the tip in a closed feedback loop fashion so as to provide servo controlled positioning of the tip 132.
Referring back to
The camera 162 then converts all the light focused to it by the microscope 160 into a data signal containing data representing an image of the focused light. The data contained by the signal is analyzed and processed by the scanning control routine 122 to determine the location of the tip 132 in the X and Y directions. Since the position of the tip 132 corresponds to a particular pixel in the camera 162, the light emitted by the tip 132 is locked into this pixel with the chopped frequency and therefore can be identified by the scanning control routine 122. As a result, the scanning control routine 122 can compute the position of the tip 132 in X and Y and therefore can control positioning of the tip 132 in X and Y in a feedback loop fashion. Moreover, as those skilled in the art will recognize, this may be done where optical microscope 160 is a conventional, spot scan, or spinning disk confocal optical microscope.
Alternatively, the tip 132 may be a light absorbing (or colored) tip or dyed to be fluorescing at a particular wavelength (by use of well known dyes such as rodomine-B). Thus, in the case where optical microscope 160 is a confocal microscope, the tip can be made to fluoresce when light of a particular wavelength is shone on the tip 132 by the confocal microscope 160. The light is detected by use of a filter which blocks all light except that corresponding to the light emitted by the tip and a photodetector to detect the light. Alternatively, the confocal microscope can shine light of a particular wavelength on the tip 132 which will be absorbed by the tip 132. The absorption of the light is detected by use of a filter and a photodetector. Therefore, in either case, the position of tip 132 can be computed from the data provided by the photodetector to the scanning control routine 122.
Moreover, when optical microscope 160 is a spot scan or spinning disk confocal microscope, it can be used to determine the position of the tip 132 in Z by being controlled by the scanning control routine 122 to focus on the tip 132. Thus, from the data signal provided from the camera 162, the scanning control routine 122 can compute the position of the tip 132 in Z. Therefore, in this case, scanning control routine can now control positioning of the tip 132 in X, Y, and Z in a feedback loop fashion. For example a optical microscope 160 may be used to image a semiconductor mask or wafer from below in the visible spectrum and infrared light emitted by the tip 132 on the top of the wafer or mask may then be used to determine the exact position of the tip 132 on the wafer.
Coincidental Surface Scan
Additionally, in the case where optical microscope 160 is an inverted biological type spot scan or spinning disk confocal optical microscope, an optical map of the surface of the object 104 coincident with the surface of the object 104 scanned with the tip 132 in the scanning probe microscopy mode can be made. This is done in a similar fashion to that just described for positioning the tip 132 in a feedback loop fashion except that an optical map in X, Y, and Z of the surface of the object 104 is generated by the analysis routine 141 using the accurate feedback loop positioning just described during a scanning probe microscopy scan. This is because a collection of focus points under the tip 132 will make a confocal optical map of the surface coincident with the surface probed by the tip 132 during the scanning probe microscopy scan.
The data formatter 520 may then replace the map of the surface of the optical image data developed during an confocal optical microscopy scan with the coincident confocal optical surface map just described. Similarly, an exact offset surface may be plotted optically by collecting points some ±ΔZ displaced from the coincident confocal surface just described. Among other things such coincident confocal surfaces may provide important information about the deformation of the surface made by the tip 132 during the AFM mode and guide the insertion of the tip 132 a specific distance into the surface during the AFM or hardness testing modes. That is, the coincident confocal surface may be used by the scanning control routine 122 to servo control the Z distance the tip 132 is pushed into the specimen during AFM or hardness testing modes.
Referring to
As shown in
The electro-optic mode shifter 246 may be a plane polarizer on top of a liquid crystal in conjunction with a wave plate and is connected to the light guide 244 with optical cement. The plane polarizer of the mode shifter 246 plane polarizes the light received from the light guide 244. At the same time, the scanning control routine 122 generates control signals for controlling the mode shift drive circuit 247 to apply a variable voltage to the liquid crystal. In response to the applied voltage, the liquid crystal rotates the plane polarized light and the wave plate in response alternatingly produces right circular, elliptical, and left circular polarized light provided to the frensel lens 250. In other words, the mode shifter 246 continuously changes the polarization state of the light provided by the light source 180 during the near-field optical mode.
Alternatively, a mechanically rotatable plane polarizer such as polarizer 184 of
However, those skilled in the art will appreciate that other configurations may be employed for rotating or continuously changing the polar state of the light 185 during the near-field optical mode. For example, the mode shifter 246 may be entirely omitted with the light 185 being rotationally polarized as was described for the configuration of
Referring to
This embodiment includes all of the modalities described above for the embodiment of
Referring to
Then, the entire tip 132 is lightly overcoated with a conductive material such as doped silicon carbide, aluminum, tungsten, gold, or other appropriate conductor and then etched to form the conductive contacts 304a and 304b. Similar to the tips 132 of
In any case, this is all done through conventional techniques known to those skilled in the art and results in a tip 132 with a PN or NP junction confined to a very small region of the tip 132 at the sharp end 188. This small junction area forms the effective aperture of the tip 132.
Referring to
Referring to
The photodiode tip 132 then detects the light and the photodiode measurement circuit 254 provides a data signal to the scanning control routine 122 indicating the intensity of the light. As a result, the position of the tip 132 in X and Y can be computed by the scanning control routine 122 from this data signal and therefore it can also control positioning of the tip 132 in X and Y in a feedback loop fashion.
Moreover, as in discussed earlier, when optical microscope 160 is a spot scan or spinning disk confocal microscope, it can be used to determine the position of the tip 132 in Z by being controlled by the scanning control routine 122 to focus on the tip 132. Therefore, in this case as well, scanning control routine can now control positioning of the tip 132 in X, Y, and Z in a feedback loop fashion.
Additionally, in this embodiment as well, a coincident confocal optical surface map can be generated. Such a map would be made and used in a similar way to that described earlier. However, in this case, the X and Y positions of the tip 132 (and therefore the map) are computed using the photodiode feature of the tip 132, in the manner just described.
The conductive coating 304 over the core material 300 of the tip 132 ends approximately few 10's of nm away from the point of the sharp end 188 of tip 132. Thus, the spatial resolution in the near-field of this arrangement is limited only by the size of this material rather then the electro-magnetic confinement properties of the coatings on tip 132 or the smoothness of tip 132. In other words, the aperture of tip 132 at the sharp end 188 is formed by the coating 310.
Light 185 may be provided to the tip 132 in the ways described for
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIFTH EMBODIMENT
Referring to
As shown in
Referring back to
Alternatively, as shown in
Moreover, as shown in
In each of the configurations described above, photoemissive energy due to the optical interaction is detected by the photodetector 194 in the near-field spectrophotometry and optical modes in the same way as described for the embodiment of
Referring to
As shown in
As shown in
In this embodiment, photoemissive energy due to the optical interaction is detected by the photodetector 194 in the same way as described or the embodiment of
After scanning a line, the image data generated by the analysis routine 137 is fourier transformed and the component of the transform at the excitation frequency is masked and amplified (the magnitude is increased) and color coded (a separate color is assigned to this wavelength only) by the display routines 136 to provide a precise reference in the final specimen image. Alternately the acoustic signal may be pulsed at each point of the scan to provide a difference signal for each point of the scan and permit the position of the tip to be adjusted according to the displacement measured by the reference acoustic wave. Clearly both techniques may be used sequentially or in selected portions of the scan.
Modulated laser 605 may also be used to excite an acoustic wave on the specimen 600 at a point (or with proper beam shaping in a line, oval, or rectangular area to create a parallel wave 602) to produce circular waves 606 whose generation could be made closer to the scanned area of the specimen and thereby overcome attenuation at very small wavelengths. Furthermore techniques for generation of picosecond and femptosecond pulses capable of generating acoustics wavelengths in the Angstrom range are well known to those in the art.
A calibration control system 607 through 611 can be used to drive the piezoelectric wave generator 603 or acoustic excitation laser and modulator 605 at frequencies locked to a reference optical frequency. In operation a chopped monochromatic light source such as a laser 607 reflects light off the acoustic wave 602 or 606 on the specimen 600 into a linear array (or square array) sensitive detectors 608. Due to the diffraction effects of the grating like structure formed by the acoustic wave 602 or 606, the diffraction angle will be sensitively limited by wavelength of the light and the acoustic grating spacing. Control circuit 609 (which acts to lock in the signal to chopping frequency of the source light, thus rejecting extraneous light sources) increases and decreases the acoustic drive frequency output by acoustic drive signal generator 610 to lock it to the reference optical frequency at any given diffraction angle. Multiple sensors within detectors 608 are aligned in the plane of the diffraction angle allow different angles (and thus acoustic wavelengths) to be selected and locked against the reference optical frequency. In addition the use of vernier acoustic excitation (exciting a beat frequency in the acoustic waves) allow any acoustic wavelength to be reference locked to the optical frequency.
Conclusion
While the present invention has been described with reference to a few specific embodiments, the description is illustrative of the invention and is not to be construed as limiting the invention. Furthermore, various other modifications may occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the true spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
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