Abstract

The sensitivity of magnetic resonance force microscopy (MRFM) is limited by surface noise. Coating a thin-film polymer sample with metal has been shown to decrease, by orders of magnitude, sample-related force noise and frequency noise in MRFM experiments. Using both MRFM and inductively detected measurements of electron-spin resonance, we show that thermally evaporating a 12 nm gold layer on a 40 nm nitroxide-doped polystyrene film inactivates the nitroxide spin labels to a depth of 20 nm, making single-spin measurements difficult or impossible. We introduce a "laminated sample" protocol in which the gold layer is first evaporated on a sacrificial polymer. The sample is deposited on the room-temperature gold layer, removed using solvent lift-off, and placed manually on a coplanar waveguide. Electron spin resonance (ESR) of such a laminated sample was detected via MRFM at cryogenic temperatures using a high-compliance cantilever with an integrated 100-nm-scale cobalt tip. A 20-fold increase of spin signal was observed relative to a thin-film sample prepared instead with an evaporated metal coating. The observed signal is still somewhat smaller than expected, and we discuss possible remaining sources of signal loss.

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