| Literature DB >> 35022414 |
Rui Yang1, Ichiro Ogura2, ZhenYan Jiang3, LinJun An3, Kiwamu Ashida2, Hiroshi Yabuno3.
Abstract
The application of self-excitation is proposed to improve the efficiency of the nanoscale cutting procedure based on use of a microcantilever in atomic force microscopy. The microcantilever shape is redesigned so that it can be used to produce vibration amplitudes with sufficient magnitudes to enable the excitation force applied by an actuator to be transferred efficiently to the tip of the microcantilever for the cutting process. A diamond abrasive that is set on the tip is also fabricated using a focused ion beam technique to improve the cutting effect. The natural frequency of the microcantilever is modulated based on the pressing load. Under conventional external excitation conditions, to maintain the microcantilever in its resonant state, it is necessary to vary the excitation frequency in accordance with the modulation. In this study, rather than using external excitation, the self-excitation cutting method is proposed to overcome this difficulty. The self-excited oscillation is produced by appropriate setting of the phase difference between the deflection signal of the microcantilever and the feedback signal for the actuator. In addition, it is demonstrated experimentally that the change in the phase difference enables us to control the amplitude of the self-excitation. As a result, control of the cutting depth is achieved via changes in the phase difference.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35022414 PMCID: PMC8755816 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-04085-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic diagram of AFM system applied to nanoscale vibration cutting method. The system includes a workpiece, a microcantilever with a diamond set on its tip, a piezo actuator to enable the microcantilever oscillation, an optical lever consisting of a laser and a quadrant photodiode to measure the deflection of the microcantilever tip and a tube scanner to move the workpiece in the x-y plane and vary the distance between the microcantilever and the workpiece in the z-direction.
Figure 2Photo (a) and Schematic diagram (b) of redesigned microcantilever. The length, width and thickness of the base step are 1.7 mm, 2 mm and 50 m, respectively. The length, width and thickness of the microcantilever are 850 m, 50 m and 50 m, respectively.
Figure 3SEM image of the original diamond abrasive on the tip of the microcantilever (a). SEM image of the diamond abrasive fabricated by focused ion beam technique (b). The fabricating was performed twice, one was rough processing with an ion beam in a diameter of 500 nm and the other was precise processing with an ion beam in a diameter of 200 nm. The angle of the fabricated diamond is 90 degrees; this angle is formed by the sides and the triangular faces at the profile vertex.
Parameters of the microcantilever.
| Description | Symbol | Value | Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| First-order eigenvalue | 1.875 | ||
| Young’s modulus | 1.93 | ||
| Density | 7.93 | ||
| Length of microcantilever | 0.85 | m | |
| Length of base step | 1.7 | m | |
| Moment of inertia of area of microcantilever | 0.52 | ||
| Moment of inertia of area of base step | 0.21 | ||
| Cross-sectional area of microcantilever | 0.25 | ||
| Cross-sectional area of base step | 0.1 |
Figure 4Frequency response curves with a log scale (a) in air and (b) under a 400 N pressing load. The first natural frequencies of the microcantilever and the base step in air were experimentally measured to be 44.35 kHz and 12.88 kHz, respectively. The first natural frequency under a 400 N pressing load was experimentally measured to be 15.49 kHz. Natural frequency of microcantilever under various pressing loads (c) with application of external excitation.
Figure 5AFM image (a) shows three cutting results marked as I, II and III with the external excitation cutting method. The hole I was first cut under application of a 200 N pressing load at an excitation frequency of 15.41 kHz which is the natural frequency under the pressing load of 200 N. The cutting result II was secondly made under application of a 400 N pressing load at an excitation frequency of 15.41 kHz. The hole III was finally cut under application of a 400 N pressing load at an excitation frequency of 15.49 kHz which is the natural frequency under the pressing load of 400 N. Four lines – in the upper corner are to indicate that the locations taken for the sectional views of three cutting results shown in Fig. 1 in Appendix B and the intersecting sectional views are centered on all cutting results. (b–d) show the magnified depiction for the AFM image of each cutting result.
Figure 6Depths for the holes I and III are the average values for all sectional views for each hole. The hole I was cut under application of a 200 N pressing load at an excitation frequency of 15.41 kHz which is the natural frequency under the pressing load of 200 N. The hole III was cut under application of a 400 N pressing load at an excitation frequency of 15.49 kHz which is the natural frequency under the pressing load of 400 N.
Figure 7Schematic diagram of self-excited microcantilever (a). Schematic diagram of the self-excited system (b) includes a workpiece, a microcantilever, a piezo actuator, a self-excited electronic circuit and an optical lever that consists of a laser and a photodiode. Self-excited electronic circuit (c) includes a voltage follower, a phase shifter, an integrating circuit and three inverting amplifiers.
Figure 9Depths of grooves cut under each pressing load with two types of cutting method (a). The triangles and the dots represent the depths using the external excitation cutting method and the self-excitation cutting method, respectively. Change in amplitude caused by controlling linear feedback gain [1/s] under application of a 400 N pressing load (b).
Figure 8AFM image (a) and (b) show the grooves cut under 400 N pressing load with the external excitation cutting method and the self-excitation cutting method, respectively.
Figure 10Block diagram of the self-excited system.
Parameters of the microcantilever and the self-excited system.
| Description | Symbol | Value | Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mass | 1.37 | ||
| Stiffness | 260 | ||
| Damping coefficient | 0.12 | Pa | |
| Capacitance | 1.0 | F | |
| Sensibility of optical lever | -4.0 | V/m |
Figure 12(a,b) show the amplitude magnitude changes in the cases when the base step and the microcantilever are self-excited in air, respectively, while the resistance value in the phase shifter is varied. (c,d) show change in the phase difference and the amplitude magnitude, respectively, caused by phase modulation under application of a 400 N pressing load while the resistance value in the phase shifter was varied from 10 to 35 .
Figure 11Root locus of the self-excited system.
Figure 13AFM image (a) shows four holes marked as I, II, III and IV which were cut under the 400 pressing load by phase difference modulations with the self-excitation cutting method. The four holes were cut while the resistance values in the phase shifter circuit were set at 15 , 20 , 25 and 30 , respectively. Four lines – in the upper corner are to indicate the locations taken for the sectional views of four holes shown in Fig. 2 in Appendix C and the intersecting sectional views are centered on all holes. (b–e) show the magnified depiction for the AFM image of each hole.
Figure 14Depths for the holes I, II, III and IV are the average value for all sectional views for each hole. Four holes were cut under application of the 400 pressing load when the four resistance values in the phase shifter were set as 15 , 20 , 25 and 30 , respectively. The corresponding amplitudes were 17 nm, 21 nm, 32 nm and 48 nm, respectively.