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scanning force microscopy (SFM)
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(Definition)
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Scanning force microscopy (SFM) or Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) is a very high-resolution type of scanning probe microscopy that uses a very sharp scan tip probe of about 50 microns, with demonstrated resolution in the AFM images of fractions of a nanometer, or at least 1000 times better than the optical diffraction limit. The precursor to the AFM, the scanning tunneling microscope, was developed by Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer in the early 1980s at IBM Research - Zurich, a development that earned them the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1986.
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"scanning force microscopy (SFM)" is owned by bci1.
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Other names: |
AFM, atomic force microscopy |
Also defines: |
SFM, AFM, scanning microscopy with a cantilever, micron resolution, nanometer resolution microscopy, mechanical contact force, van der Waals forces, capillary forces, chemical bonding, electrostatic forces, magnetic force microscope (MFM), Casimir forces, solvation forces, Wheatstone bridge |
Keywords: |
AFM, atomic force microscopy, Wheatstone bridge, scanning microscopy, cantilever, micron resolution, nanometer resolution microscopy, mechanical contact force, van der Waals forces, capillary forces, chemical bonding, electrostatic forces, magnetic force microscope (MFM), Casimir forces, solvation forces |
Cross-references: scanning probe microscopy, type
There is 1 reference to this object.
This is version 4 of scanning force microscopy (SFM), born on 2010-11-27, modified 2010-11-27.
Object id is 893, canonical name is ScanningForceMicroscopySFM.
Accessed 1105 times total.
Classification:
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Pending Errata and Addenda
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