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Imaging of the Soft Matter Particulate Systems by Scanning Electron Microscopy

POSTER

Abstract

Polymeric microgels suspended in water exhibit a reversible volume transition phase upon heating which leads to nanoparticles deswelling by as much as a factor of 15 in volume. Microgels are typically characterized by noninvasive techniques of dynamic light scattering (DLS), which probe particle structure/dynamics. More direct methods such as scanning electron microscopy (SEM) are useful for visualizing polydisperse microgel samples. As SEM typically uses high vacuum to characterize dried samples it is problematic as the dehydrated microgels collapse under vacuum. This project explores wet particle imaging in an ionic liquid stable under high vacuum. Particles were suspended in a thin ionic liquid film on a copper grid and were studied for both size distribution and dynamics. The experiment was tried on separate suspensions of silica particles and polymeric microgels. The silica particles exhibited Brownian motion proving the concept of the approach. While the average SEM sizes of microgels generally agreed with sizes obtained by DLS in ionic liquid at room temperature, the initial attempts at diffusion analysis using SEM particle tracking yielded mixed results. The microgels were often observed to drift significantly, clustering with nearby particles and drifting towards the grid edges.

Authors

  • Richard Sent

    Cleveland State University

  • Samantha Hudson

    Liverpool, Konkoly, STScI, PMO, SKA, Yale, National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory, Western Michigan University, School of Physics, Peking University, NSCL, Department of Physics, Korea University, Rare Isotope Science Project, Institute for Basic Science, Daejeon, Department of Physics, Western Michigan University, Korea University, Riken, Kyoto University, NCSL, New Mexico State University, Jefferson Lab, Lebanon Valley College, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Youngstown State University, Cleveland State University, Department of Physics, SUNY Buffalo State, Buffalo, NY 14222 USA, Department of Physics, SUNY Buffalo State, Buffalo, NY 14222

  • Samantha Hudson

    Liverpool, Konkoly, STScI, PMO, SKA, Yale, National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory, Western Michigan University, School of Physics, Peking University, NSCL, Department of Physics, Korea University, Rare Isotope Science Project, Institute for Basic Science, Daejeon, Department of Physics, Western Michigan University, Korea University, Riken, Kyoto University, NCSL, New Mexico State University, Jefferson Lab, Lebanon Valley College, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Youngstown State University, Cleveland State University, Department of Physics, SUNY Buffalo State, Buffalo, NY 14222 USA, Department of Physics, SUNY Buffalo State, Buffalo, NY 14222

  • Samantha Hudson

    Liverpool, Konkoly, STScI, PMO, SKA, Yale, National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory, Western Michigan University, School of Physics, Peking University, NSCL, Department of Physics, Korea University, Rare Isotope Science Project, Institute for Basic Science, Daejeon, Department of Physics, Western Michigan University, Korea University, Riken, Kyoto University, NCSL, New Mexico State University, Jefferson Lab, Lebanon Valley College, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Youngstown State University, Cleveland State University, Department of Physics, SUNY Buffalo State, Buffalo, NY 14222 USA, Department of Physics, SUNY Buffalo State, Buffalo, NY 14222