Observation of Nanoscale Opto-Mechanical Molecular Damping; Origin of Spectroscopic Contrast in Photo Induced Force Microscopy
Mohammad A. Almajhadi, Syed Mohammad Ashab Uddin, and H. Kumar, Wickramasinghe

TL;DR
This study reveals that spectroscopic contrast in infrared photoinduced force microscopy (PiFM) is caused by opto-mechanical damping of the cantilever, a dissipative interaction between the sample and tip, confirmed through experiments and theoretical modeling.
Contribution
First experimental observation of opto-mechanical damping in AFM, elucidating the contrast mechanism in PiFM through combined experiments and theoretical analysis.
Findings
Opto-mechanical damping mediates PiFM contrast.
Near-field optical interaction is attractive.
Thermal expansion effects are negligible at detection limits.
Abstract
We experimentally investigated the contrast mechanism of infrared photoinduced force microscopy (PiFM) for recording vibrational resonances. Extensive experiments have demonstrated that spectroscopic contrast in PiFM is mediated by opto-mechanical damping of the cantilever oscillation as the optical wavelength is scanned through optical resonance. To our knowledge, this is the first time opto-mechanical damping has been observed in the AFM. We hypothesize that this damping force is a consequence of the dissipative interaction between the sample and the vibrating tip; the modulated light source in PiFM modulates the effective damping constant of the 2nd eigenmode of the cantilever which in turn generate side-band signals producing the PiFM signal at the 1st eigenmode. A series of experiments have eliminated other mechanisms of contrast. By tracking the frequency shift of the PiFM signal…
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