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Journal ArticleDOI

Sensor nanofabrication, performance, and conduction mechanisms in scanning thermal microscopy

K. Luo, +3 more
- 01 Mar 1997 - 
- Vol. 15, Iss: 2, pp 349-360
TLDR
In this paper, a new nanofabrication procedure has been developed for making thermocouple probes for high-resolution scanning thermal microscopy, which can achieve a spatial resolution of 24 nm.
Abstract
A new nanofabrication procedure has been developed for making thermocouple probes for high-resolution scanning thermal microscopy. Thermocouple junctions were placed at the end of SiNx cantilever probe tips and were typically 100–500 nm in diameter. Cantilever bending due to thermal expansion mismatch was minimized for Au–Ni, Au–Pt, and Au–Pd thermocouples, by carefully choosing thermal probe materials, film thicknesses, and deposition conditions. A spatial resolution of 24 nm was demonstrated for thermal microscopy although the noise-equivalent limit of 10 nm was estimated from experimental data. Using thermo-power measurements, a simple model was developed to calculate the tip-sample thermal resistance. Model-based calculations, correlations between topographical and thermal features, as well as experiments in different gaseous and humidity environments indicate that the dominant tip-surface heat conduction is most likely through a liquid film bridging the tip and the sample surface, and not through the surrounding gas, solid-solid point contact, or near-field radiation. Dynamic measurements within a 100 kHz bandwidth showed a time constant of about 0.15±0.02 ms which was attributed to the thermal time constant of the whole cantilever. Calculations suggested the RC electrical time constant and the thermal time constant of the thermocouple junction to be on the order of 10 ns which, however, could not be experimentally probed.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Thermometry and Thermal Transport in Micro/Nanoscale Solid-State Devices and Structures

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review recent advances in experimental methods for high spatial-resolution and high time-resolution thermometry and the application of these and related methods for measurements of thermal transport in low-dimensional structures.
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Scanning thermal microscopy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review of the technology of scanning thermal microscopy and its applications in thermally probing micro-and nanostructured materials and devices and identify the parameters that control the temporal and temperature resolution in thermometry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Micro-thermal analysis: techniques and applications

TL;DR: Micro-thermal analysis as mentioned in this paper is a technique that uses a near-field thermal probe to exploit the benefits of using thermal excitation to select regions of a solid sample by means of surface or sub-surface imaging (atomic force microscopy or scanning thermal microscopy).
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermal Transport Mechanisms at Nanoscale Point Contacts

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the heat transfer mechanisms at a 90±10 nm diameter point contact between a sample and a probe tip of a scanning thermal microscope (SThM).
Journal ArticleDOI

Scanning thermal microscopy: A review

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the main scanning probe microscopy-based techniques developed for thermal imaging with nanoscale spatial resolution is presented, which includes the characterization of operating devices, the measurements of the effective thermal conductivity of nanomaterials and local phase transition temperatures.