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Direct Detection of Intermolecular Forces by Atomic Force Microscopy

Direct Detection of Intermolecular Forces by Atomic Force Microscopy PDF Author: Hjalti Skúlason
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Intermolecular forces
Languages : en
Pages : 536

Book Description
"The phenomenon of adhesion appears in various applications of everyday life, ranging from PostIt NotesTM and Scotch TapeTM, to the assembly of aircraft and space shuttles. However, adhesion on the molecular scale is fundamentally different from the adhesion that we experience in the macroscopic world. While macroscopic objects require special adhesives or glues to bind them together, microsca1e and nanoscale objects and molecules commonly have a high affinity to adhere to each other. A detailed description of intermolecular forces is therefore of key importance in order to understand a wide range of phenomena, ranging from macroscopic properties of materials to molecular recognition. Two key aspects of the atomic force microscope (AFM), namely its sensitivity to sub-nanoNewton forces and its very sharp probe, offer the opportunity to measure interactions between very small numbers of molecules. Through chemical tailoring of both substrates and AFM probes with self-assembled mono layers (SAMs), measurements of forces acting between specific functional groups can be measured. Furthermore, the force required to rupture a single chemical bond can be obtained by a detailed analysis of the histograms of rupture forces. A new model was derived to examine the relationship between the various experimental variables and the shape of histograms of rupture forces when discrete chemical bonds are formed between the AFM probe and substrate. Calculations based on the model demonstrated that in measurements aimed at detecting single bond rupture forces, strict limits are put on the size of the AFM probe, the relative magnitude of the interfacial energies and the bond formation probability. These results were used in two experimental systems where the single bond rupture force was successfully measured: 0) the abstraction of a single Au-S complex from an Au coated AFM probe; and (ill the rupture of a single charge-transfer (cI) complex between tetramethylphenylenediamine (TMPO) and tetracyanoquinodimethane (TCNQ). Measurements involving only one molecule at a time were conducted using polymer chains chemically grafted to the AFM probe and substrate. In these measurements, the effect of the solvent on the elasticity of the polyethylene-propylene oligomers was directly observed in the force-elongation profile"--Leaves iii-iv.