Detection and Signal Processing for Near-Field Nanoscale Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (2303.10329v1)
Abstract: Researchers from a broad spectrum of scientific and engineering disciplines are increasingly using near-field infrared spectroscopic techniques to characterize materials nondestructively and with nanoscale spatial resolution. However, sub-optimal understanding of a technique's implementation can complicate data interpretation and even act as a barrier to enter the field. Here we outline the key detection and processing steps involved in producing scattering-type near-field nanoscale Fourier transform infrared spectra (nano-FTIR). The largely self-contained work (i) explains how normalized complex-valued nano-FTIR spectra are generated, (ii) rationalizes how the real and imaginary components of spectra relate to dispersion and absorption respectively, (iii) derives a new and generally valid equation for spectra which can be used as a springboard for additional modeling of the scattering processes, and (iv) provides an algebraic expression that can be used to extract the sample's local extinction coefficient from nano-FTIR. The algebraic expression is validated with nano-FTIR and attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectra on samples of polystyrene and Kapton.
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