CPM Seminar
Tip-enhanced optical spectroscopy — breaking the
diffraction limit towards the nanoworld
Andreas Rüdiger
Nanoelectronics-Nanophotonics INRS-EMT
Optical spectroscopy is among the most versatile tool in physics, chemistry,
material and life science covering a large spectral range and therefore
a variety of light-matter interaction, both linear and non-linear. But
regardless of whether the technique is absorption, fluorescence, elastic and
inelastic scattering, second harmonic generation only to mention a few and
regardless of the use of lasers for scanning techniques: the diffraction
limit as quantified in the 19th century limits the spatial resolution to
the order of the excitation wavelength. This corresponds to several hundred
nanometers in the visible range and used to be a roadblock for the application
in nanoscience. Complementary techniques including electron microscopy and
scanning probe microscopy pushed the resolution limit to the atomic level,
however at the price of severe limitations to the chemical and structural
information as compared to optical techniques. In very recent years,
the combination of scanning probe techniques such as scanning tunneling
and atomic force microscopy (STM and AFM respectively) with confocal
laser scanning microscopy has pushed the limits of optical spectroscopy
to new horizons. The concept relies on the use of a scanning probe tip to
act as a local near-field amplifier (‘nano-antenna’)
in the focus of a confocal laser-scanning microscope. The enhancement and
confinement of the electromagnetic field is typically achieved through the
resonant excitation of surface plasmons in noble-metal tips.
The proof of concept for this technique was delivered about a decade ago
[1] and provided evidence for single-molecule sensitivity in
resonant-Raman spectroscopy. With dedicated experimental setups, tip-enhanced
Raman spectroscopy has achieved spatial resolution of 10 nm and less
while preserving most of the spectral information of conventional Raman
spectroscopy. The experimental key challenge remains in the reproducible
fabrication of resonating tips and their mid-term stability.
This presentation will briefly revisit some merits of conventional spectroscopy
in physics and material science before introducing the basics of tip-enhanced
spectroscopy. We report on a tip-enhanced Raman experiment for non-transparent,
isolating samples as frequently encountered in oxide nanoelectronics, one
of the research focuses of our team. We achieved a spatial resolution of
14 nm FWHM on carbon nanotubes [2]. Our latest results on
lead titanate (PbTiO3) nanoislands grown by a template approach
show that we achieve tip-enhanced Rayleigh and Raman scattering, the latter
with an unprecedented spatial resolution of about 6 nm. Tip-enhanced optical
spectroscopy clearly is a promising contender for future generations of
surface characterization techniques and the new limits for optical resolution
are yet to be determined.
[1] B. Pettinger, B. Ren, G. Picardi,
R. Schuster, G. Ertl, Nanoscale Probing of Adsorbed Species by
tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy, Physical Review Letters, 92
(2004) 096101
[2] M. Nicklaus, C. Nauenheim, A. Krayev,
V. Gavrilyuk, A. Belyaev, A. Ruediger, Tip-enhanced Raman
spectroscopy with objective scanner on opaque samples, Review of
Scientific Instruments, 83 (2012) 066102
Thursday, February 7th 2013, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)
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