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Suh, Yung Doug
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Correlated topographic and spectroscopic imaging beyond diffraction limit by atomic force microscopy metallic tip-enhanced near-field fluorescence lifetime microscopy

Author(s)
Hu, DHMicic, MKlymyshyn, NSuh, Yung DougLu, HP
Issued Date
2003-07
DOI
10.1063/1.1581359
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/58791
Fulltext
https://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/1.1581359
Citation
REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS, v.74, no.7, pp.3347 - 3355
Abstract
A near-field optical imaging approach is demonstrated for simultaneous topographic and spectroscopic imaging with spatial resolution beyond the optical diffraction limit. The method combines metallic-tip-based tapping-mode atomic force microscopy (AFM) with fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM). The AFM metallic tip was formed by sputter coating a Si tapping mode tip with Au, in a way that forms a globular tip apex. Such tip apex generates high local electric field enhancement under laser illumination, which provides a strong electric-field interaction between the AFM tip and the fluorescent molecules under the tip. The tip perturbation of fluorescence gives the fluorescence lifetime changes that provide the AFM-FLIM imaging contrast. A finite element method simulation was used to further evaluate the electric near-field enhancement and electric field distribution originating from the metallic Au-coated AFM tapping-mode tip. We have demonstrated that spatially mapping the change in fluorescence lifetime and intensity is a promising approach to spectroscopic imaging at an AFM spatial resolution typically defined by the apex diameter of the AFM tips. The globular Au-coated AFM tip not only gives adequate spatial AFM tapping-mode imaging spatial resolution but also is "environmentally friendly" to soft samples, such as polymeric dye-labeled nanospheres and even biological specimens such as POPO-3 labeled DNA. (C) 2003 American Institute of Physics.
Publisher
AMER INST PHYSICS
ISSN
0034-6748
Keyword
SCANNING OPTICAL MICROSCOPYRAMAN-SPECTROSCOPYSURFACEMOLECULESEXCITATIONPROBESSIMULATIONSCATTERING

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