WEST
LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Mechanical engineers at Purdue
University have proven that the same sort of "deterministic
chaos" behind the baffling uncertainties of the stock
market and long-term weather conditions also interferes
with measurements taken with a commonly used scientific
instrument.
"The idea that chaos interferes with measurements
in atomic-force microscopy has been sort of an urban
myth over the years, but we have now proven this
to be a fact," said Arvind
Raman , an associate professor of mechanical
engineering.
The findings will be detailed in a paper to appear
online on Jan. 20 in the journal Physical Review
Letters. The paper was written by mechanical engineering
doctoral student Shuiqing Hu and Raman.
The engineers also have shown through a series of
experiments precisely how much error is caused by
the effects of chaos, information that could be used
to help researchers make more accurate measurements
with atomic-force microscopes.
Atomic-force
microscopes are instruments used to take three-dimensional
images of tiny structures for research and industry
in fields such as nanotechnology, electronics,
telecommunications and biotechnology. Researchers
use the instruments to determine the features of
objects and materials on the scale of nanometers,
or billionths of a meter. The method works by passing
a tiny cone-shaped tip close to the surface of
an object, tracing its features. The tip is attached
to a device called a "microcantilever," which
resembles a diving board with the tip attached to
the free end. The cantilever is caused to oscillate
by the vibrating motion of a "piezoelectric crystal" that
moves when voltage is applied to it. The force exerted
by the crystal can be adjusted to increase and decrease
how much the tip oscillates. The greater the vibration,
the larger the "amplitude," or how far the tip moves
each time it swings toward and away from the surface
of the object being measured.
As
the cantilever tip oscillates up and down, its
motion is influenced by forces, including van der
Waals' forces, which exist between atoms. The van
der Waals' forces become stronger as the tip gets
closer to the surface. Information about the strength
of the atomic force reveals how close the tip is
to the surface of the object being studied. Researchers
use this atomic-force information to position the
tip extremely close to the surface. Then, as the
tip scans the surface and encounters changes in contour,
the entire microcantilever assembly tracks up and
down to keep the tip's oscillating amplitude the
same. The changing position of the cantilever is
carefully monitored to reveal the topology of the
surface of the object, yielding an image. This method
for using the microscope is commonly referred to
by researchers as the "tapping mode."
"For the method to work properly and yield accurate
images that show features on the scale of nanometers,
the microcantilever tip should always oscillate the
same way, nice and smoothly like clockwork," Raman
said. "But sometimes the tip suddenly begins oscillating
chaotically, producing errors in the measurements."
Until
now, researchers did not know why under certain
operating conditions nanoscale features appear "noisy" and
erroneous.
Hu increased the driving force of the piezoelectric
crystal while the microscope was operating in the
tapping mode to deliberately produce chaos. The research
showed that increasing the amplitude of the microcanteliver
by a specific amount resulted abruptly in chaotic
oscillations. When Hu increased the amplitude again
slightly, the oscillations returned to a normal,
smooth motion. Increasing the amplitude further again
resulted in chaos.
The experiments were conducted under various conditions,
including inside an airtight chamber filled with
pure nitrogen, eliminating water vapor, which could
taint the results. Hu also analyzed data to detect
chaotic behavior by using the same kinds of sophisticated
software algorithms commonly used to identify chaotic
patterns in the stock market.
"This is the first experimental proof that under
some reasonable operating conditions these cantilevers
can oscillate chaotically," Raman said. "We are not
claiming that our findings answer all of the questions
about what causes the chaotic behavior in atomic-force
microscopy. There could be additional reasons for
the chaotic behavior."
The errors resulting from chaos cause measurements
to be off by only a few nanometers.
"We end this paper by saying that maybe this amount
of error is negligible by today's standards because
the average atomic-force microscope user is not measuring
features as small as one or two nanometers," Raman
said. "They are making measurements on the scale
of about 1,500 nanometers, so if you are off by a
couple of nanometers, no big deal.
"But
some researchers are pushing the technology and
trying to measure very carefully on the scale of
two or three nanometers. Certainly, in the future,
more and more scientists and engineers will be
making measurements at this scale and the errors
caused by chaos will no longer be negligible. These
findings will be helpful in preventing chaos and
reducing the errors."
The findings also identify which types of cantilevers
are most prone to chaos, depending on what they are
made of and how stiff they are.
"Two
major practical results are that we now know what
kinds of cantilevers to choose to avoid chaos,
and we know the range of amplitudes that result
in chaos."
Another
important revelation, Raman said, is that the form
of chaos observed is in the "deterministic" world
of ordinary physics that governs everything from
a baseball's trajectory to the motion of planets.
Researchers had thought the microscope's sudden aberrant
behavior might be caused by exotic forces associated
with quantum mechanics, which describes the abstract
inner workings of atoms.
Chaos
usually is observed in large-scale phenomena, such
as long-term weather conditions, the motion of
objects in the solar system, sudden changes in
the heart's rhythm or the operation of mechanical
systems such as washing machines. In such cases,
the chaotic behavior is caused by small, seemingly
unrelated random events. This randomness has been
described as the "butterfly effect," or the idea
that small variations in the initial conditions of
a system result in large changes in the long-term
behavior of the system. Tiny changes in the atmosphere
caused by a butterfly flapping its wings could ultimately
combine with other random events to produce severe
weather a year later thousands of miles away.
"You very rarely see chaos and nanotechnology mentioned
together, but it's nice to know that chaos is not
just something that happens on the large scale," Raman
said.
The research was funded by the National Science
Foundation and is associated with Purdue's Birck
Nanotechnology Center at Discovery Park, the
university's hub for interdisciplinary research.
Writer: Emil Venere, (765) 494-4709, venere@purdue.edu
Source: Arvind Raman, (765) 494-5733, raman@ecn.purdue.edu
Purdue News Service: (765) 494-2096; purduenews@purdue.edu
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