A great number of chemical and mechanical phenomena, ranging from catalysis tofriction, are dictated by the atomic-scale structure and properties of material surfaces.
Despite such enormous significance, the principal tools utilized to characterize surfaces
at the atomic level rely heavily on strict environmental conditions such as ultrahigh
vacuum and low temperature. Results obtained under such well-controlled, pristine
conditions bear limited relevance to the great majority of processes and applications
that often occur under ambient conditions. In this thesis, we report true atomic-
resolution surface imaging via conductive atomic force microscopy (C-AFM) under
ambient conditions, performed at high scanning speeds. We hypothesize that atomic
resolution can be enabled by either (i) a confined, electrically conductive pathway at
the tip–sample contact, or (ii) tunneling through a confined water layer accumulated
on the sample surface under ambient conditions. Our approach delivers atomic-
resolution maps on a variety of material surfaces that comprise defects including
single atomic vacancies. Using our method, we also report the capability of in situ
charge state manipulation of defects on MoS 2 . Finally, we employ the high-speed C-
AFM methodology to study a thin transition metal carbide crystal (i.e., an MXene),
α–Mo 2 C. Along with a variety of atomically-resolved defect structures, we observe an
exotic electronic effect: room-temperature charge ordering. Our findings demonstrate
that C-AFM can be utilized as a powerful tool for atomic-resolution imaging and
manipulation of surface structure and electronics under ambient conditions, with
wide-ranging applicability.