Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
715882 IFAC Proceedings Volumes 2010 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

We present the design and experimental results of a high-accuracy atomic force microscope head (HAFM) to be used for dimensional metrology. HAFM uses monolithic flexures which are designed for minimum error motion. A piezoelectric stack drives the head over a range of 20 /m. HAFM uses a self-sensing AFM probe, which is operated in constant-amplitude self-resonance, for frequency-measuring microscopy. A discrete-time surface-tracking controller is implemented on a real-time FPGA board. The controller tracks the surface by maintaining a constant self-resonance period. To avoid spurious mixing, the controller's sampling is made synchronous to the self-resonance oscillations. Three capacitive displacement sensors directly measure the surface tracking motion. We have experimentally demonstrated surface tracking control with 100 Hz unity-crossover frequency, 70 degrees phase margin, and 0.12 nm RMS noise in a 100 Hz measurement bandwidth. We have also used the HAFM to measure calibration gratings and the surface of freshly cleaved sanded Mica sample.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Computational Mechanics