Near-field light is strongly localized at the apex of a metallic tip, and thus the near-field light intensity at the sample and the resulting TERS intensity exponentially decreases with the distance between the tip and sample19, as shown in Fig. 1. As a function of the tip-sample distance x, the TERS intensity ITERS is expressed as follows:
I TERS = I0 exp(-\(\frac{x}{d}\)).
Here, I0 represents TERS intensity at a tip-sample distance of 0 nm, and d indicates the decay length of TERS intensity. To understand the relationship between the tapping amplitude and TERS signal intensity, we chose a fixed value of the decay length as d = 10 nm, which is a typical value used in TERS measurements. We evaluated how TERS intensity varied with time under the tapping motion of the tip. Assuming that the tip sinusoidally oscillates with the tapping amplitude A, TERS intensity ITERS is described as
I TERS = I0 exp\(\left[-\frac{\left\{A+A\text{sin}\left(\omega t\right)\right\}}{d}\right]\).
where ω and t are the tapping frequency and time, respectively. Black and red curves in Fig. 2(a) represent the time variation of the tip-sample distance and TERS intensity ITERS, respectively, at different tapping amplitudes. When the tapping amplitude was set to 50 nm, which is a typical value of amplitude used in tapping-mode AFM, the TERS signal was generated with reasonable intensity only for a short duration when the tip was close to the sample. We then decreased the tapping amplitude to 10, 2, and 0 nm, respectively, and compared TERS signals. Here, an amplitude of 0 nm indicates that the tip is operated in the contact mode. By reducing the tapping amplitude from 50 to 0 nm, the total amount of TERS signal drastically increased. The largest TERS signal was obtained in the contact mode, as expected, because the tip-sample distance was always 0 nm, and hence the sample was always immersed in the near-field light. We integrated TERS intensity with time to evaluate the mean TERS signal intensity. As indicated in Fig. 2(a), the integrated TERS signal was reduced to 83% at a tapping amplitude of 2 nm compared with the contact mode. It was almost half at an amplitude of 10 nm and dropped down to only 18% at an amplitude of 50 nm. These results show the importance of optimizing the tapping amplitude for TERS measurements. It requires at least five times longer exposure time to obtain a similar amount of TERS signal in the case of a tapping amplitude of 50 nm compared to the contact mode. This is significant especially when attempting to perform TERS imaging, as it takes a long time to acquire multiple TERS spectra. In contrast, we found that a reasonably high TERS signal could be obtained by reducing the amplitude to a few nanometers. Figure 2(b) shows a relationship between the integrated TERS signal and the tapping amplitude. Here, the integrated TERS signal was normalized to the intensity obtained in the contact mode. This shows how quickly the TERS signal decreases with the tapping amplitude and how crucial it is to maintain the tapping amplitude small. In other words, by reducing the amplitude to a few nanometers, it is possible to obtain affordable TERS intensity or even TERS intensity almost comparable to that obtained in the contact mode, which is a promising fact to apply the tapping-mode AFM for TERS measurements.
In the analysis above, although we assumed that the decay length d has a typical value of 10 nm, the decay length should vary between tips because it changes even with a slight difference in the tip shape. Hence, we also investigated the relationship between the TERS signal and the tapping amplitude with different decay lengths. We varied it from 2 to 30 nm, as shown in Fig. 3. The case of a 10 nm decay length is also included for a comparison in Fig. 3, as shown by the black curve. As expected, when the near-field light was strongly confined, that is, when the decay length was short, the influence of the tapping amplitude on TERS signal was significant. In particular, in the case where the decay length was 2 nm, TERS signal was reduced by more than 80% even at a tapping amplitude of 10 nm in comparison to the contact mode. On the other hand, the change in the TERS signal was comparatively moderate with larger decay lengths. When the decay length was 30 nm, the reduction of the TERS signal was less than only 25% at a tapping amplitude of 10 nm, although such a long decay length is rarely obtained with normal metallic tips. However, even if the signal reduction is modest, it is still better to maintain a smaller tapping amplitude for a larger TERS signal. Please note that the results do not imply that a larger decay length provides a higher TERS signal, as it is normalized by the intensity obtained in the contact mode for each decay length. A stronger confinement, i.e. a shorter decay length, of near-field light leads to a higher TERS intensity. The results shown in Fig. 3 can be used to compare different tapping amplitudes for the same tip and decay length. However, it is not appropriate to compare different tips that show different decay lengths because the near-field light intensity is completely different between different metallic tips.
We then performed tapping-mode TERS measurements by changing the tapping amplitude to examine the dependence of the TERS signal on the tapping amplitude. Figure 4(a) shows a schematic of the experimental setup. A single-mode laser (wavelength: 638 nm) was passed through a beam expander and several filters. A spatial mask was also inserted for evanescent illumination of a metallic tip. The metallic tip was mounted on an AFM, and the laser was focused on the tip through an oil-immersion objective lens (NA: 1.45). The position of the laser focus was precisely adjusted to the tip apex using a Galvano mirror scanner to efficiently excite near-field light at the tip apex. The Raman signal excited by the near-field light was detected using a Peltier-cooled CCD camera through a spectroscope. Rayleigh-scattered noise was efficiently removed using an edge filter. More details about the experimental setup are described in the Methods section and in our previous reports7–9. Figure 4(b) shows a scanning electron microscopy (SEM) image of a typical metallic tip. It was fabricated by depositing silver on a commercially available tapping-mode cantilever tip via physical vapor deposition. Granular silver nanoparticles were deposited on the tip, which is suitable for generating strong near-field light through resonance oscillations of localized surface plasmons at the tip apex. The cantilever length was 160 µm (OMCL-AC160TN, Olympus), and the spring constant and resonance frequency are 26 N/m and 300 kHz, respectively.
To conduct TERS measurements, we chose tungsten disulfide (WS2) as the sample. WS2 is an atomically thin two-dimensional material that is promising for future electric devices owing to its thinness and superior electric properties22–25. First, we deposited a buffer layer of copper and subsequently deposited a smooth gold layer on a cleaned glass substrate via physical vapor deposition. The thickness of the copper layer was 2 nm26. It works as an adhesion layer to smoothen the gold layer. The thickness of the gold layer was 10 nm. Few-layered WS2 was mechanically exfoliated from a WS2 bulk crystal using scotch-tape and attached to the gold layer27,28. Figure 5(a) shows an AFM image of a bilayer WS2 sample used for TERS measurement. The number of layers was determined from its height, as shown in Fig. 5(b). The sample was placed on the AFM sample stage, and the metallic tip was brought on the sample from the top, so that WS2 was sandwiched between the gold layer and the metallic tip. TERS measurements were performed in the gap-mode regime, which allows reliable TERS measurements because one can easily obtain a strong enhancement of the near-field Raman signal from the tip9,10,29. Although Raman signal must pass through the gold layer in this configuration, the 10-nm-thick gold layer is thin enough for Raman measurement, as confirmed in our previous study9.
For the tapping-mode TERS measurements, the tapping amplitude was controlled by changing the applied voltage to an oscillation piezo, and was monitored in the AFM system. The tapping amplitude was varied from 1.6 nm to 24 nm. Figure 5(c) shows TERS spectra of WS2 obtained at different tapping amplitudes. The laser power at the sample plane and the exposure time were ~ 1.0 mW and 5 s, respectively. WS2 exhibited two distinctive Raman peaks originating from the E12g mode at approximately 350 cm− 1 and the A1g mode at approximately 420 cm− 1 25,30. A far-field Raman spectrum acquired by retracting the tip is also shown by the black spectrum. We confirmed Raman signal enhancement by near-field light at the tip apex. More importantly, signal enhancement increased with decreasing tapping amplitude. TERS signal was slightly enhanced or showed almost no enhancement at a tapping amplitude of 24 nm. In contrast, the TERS signal was significantly enhanced at a tapping amplitude of 1.6 nm. The A1g mode was enhanced to three times as high as that of the far-field Raman spectrum. We experimentally verified that the tapping amplitude significantly affected the TERS intensity. TERS signal intensities of the A1g mode are plotted with respect to the tapping amplitude in Fig. 5(d). The intensities are plotted after subtracting the far-field Raman spectrum from corresponding TERS spectrum such that Raman signal generated only by the near-field light was extracted. Five TERS spectra were acquired at different locations within the sample for each tapping amplitude. Please note that TERS intensities were almost the same at different locations as our WS2 sample had homogeneous structures. It was evaluated that TERS signal was increased three times by reducing the tapping amplitude from 24 nm to 1.6 nm. Such a large improvement allows to obtain a TERS spectrum with high signal-to-noise ratio. As aforementioned, it is also crucial for TERS imaging because it takes a long time to obtain a large number of TERS spectra pixel by pixel. The imaging time can be shortened by simply reducing the tapping amplitude. The decay length in this measurement was estimated to be ~ 10 nm according to Fig. 3. This indicated that 70–80% of the TERS signal was obtained at a tapping amplitude of 1.6 nm even with the tapping mode in comparison to the contact mode.