Learning Reduced Order Dynamics via Geometric Representations
Imran Nasim, Melanie Weber
SCML 2024
The capability of atomic-force microscopy (AFM) to localize both individual adsorbates and aggregates of adsorbed molecules was demonstrated a few years ago. More recently submonolayers of fullerene molecules deposited on a gold substrate have been imaged using such devices. In this paper, simulations of the atomic force between a thin probe tip and a set of adsorbed molecules is presented. The long-range part of the interaction is determined from a whole self-consistent procedure in which many-body effects are accounted for at all orders. In this description the probe tip interacts with the molecules and the surface through many-body dispersion forces. Short-range interactions are then included by using an atom-atom semiempirical pairwise potential. Simulations of AFM images of C60 adsorbed molecules are presented in two different modes of imaging: the constant-tip-height mode and the constant-force mode. © 1993 The American Physical Society.
Imran Nasim, Melanie Weber
SCML 2024
Julian J. Hsieh
Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology A: Vacuum, Surfaces and Films
Surendra B. Anantharaman, Joachim Kohlbrecher, et al.
MRS Fall Meeting 2020
I.K. Pour, D.J. Krajnovich, et al.
SPIE Optical Materials for High Average Power Lasers 1992