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Towards Quantitative Interpretation of 3D Atomic Force Microscopy at Solid-Liquid Interfaces

Chemical Physics 2025-01-07 v1

Abstract

Three-dimensional atomic force microscopy (3D-AFM) has been a powerful tool to probe the atomic-scale structure of solid-liquid interfaces. As a nanoprobe moves along the 3D volume of interfacial liquid, the probe-sample interaction force is sensed and mapped, providing information on not only the solid morphology, but also the liquid density distribution. To date 3D-AFM force maps of a diverse set of solid-liquid interfaces have been recorded, revealing remarkable force oscillations that are typically attributed to solvation layers or electrical double layers. However, despite the high resolution down to sub-angstrom level, quantitative interpretation of the 3D force maps has been an outstanding challenge. Here we will review the technical details of 3D-AFM and the existing approaches for quantitative data interpretation. Based on evidences in recent literature, we conclude that the perturbation-induced AFM force paradoxically represents the intrinsic, unperturbed liquid density profile. We will further discuss how the oscillatory force profiles can be attributed to the probe-modulation of the liquid configurational entropy, and how the quantitative, atomic-scale liquid density distribution can be derived from the force maps.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2501.02939,
  title  = {Towards Quantitative Interpretation of 3D Atomic Force Microscopy at Solid-Liquid Interfaces},
  author = {Qian Ai and Lalith Krishna Samanth Bonagiri and Amir Farokh Payam and Narayana R. Aluru and Yingjie Zhang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2501.02939},
  year   = {2025}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T20:57:27.593Z