Nanoscale electrical measurements in liquids using AFM - progress and outlook
Liam Collins, Jason Kilpatrick, Sergei V. Kalinin, and Brian J., Rodriguez

TL;DR
This review discusses recent advances in nanoscale electrical measurements at solid-liquid interfaces using force-sensitive scanning probe microscopy techniques, highlighting new methods, theoretical models, and future challenges.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the development and extension of KPFM techniques into liquid environments, including theoretical insights and practical advancements.
Findings
Enhanced KPFM methods for liquid environments
Understanding of EDL forces and dynamics at the nanoscale
Roadmap for future liquid KPFM development
Abstract
Fundamental mechanisms of energy storage, corrosion, sensing, and multiple biological functionalities are directly coupled to electrical processes and ionic dynamics at solid-liquid interfaces. In many cases, these processes are spatially inhomogeneous taking place at grain boundaries, step edges, point defects, ion channels, etc. and possess complex time and voltage dependent dynamics. This necessitates time-resolved and real-space probing of these phenomena. In this review, we discuss the applications of force-sensitive voltage modulated scanning probe microscopy (SPM) for probing electrical phenomena at solid-liquid interfaces. We first describe the working principles behind electrostatic and Kelvin Probe Force microscopies (EFM & KPFM) at the gas-solid interface, review the state of the art in advanced KPFM methods and developments to (i) overcome limitations of classical KPFM, (i)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForce Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Electrochemical Analysis and Applications · Analytical Chemistry and Sensors
