Enhancing nanoscale viscoelasticity characterization in bimodal atomic force microscopy

被引:0
|
作者
Adam, Casey Erin [1 ]
Piacenti, Alba Rosa [1 ]
Waters, Sarah L. [2 ]
Contera, Sonia [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Dept Phys, Oxford OX1 3PU, England
[2] Univ Oxford, Math Inst, Wolfson Ctr Math Biol, Oxford OX2 6GG, England
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES; RELAXATION SPECTRUM; MODULUS; AFM;
D O I
10.1039/d4sm00671b
中图分类号
O64 [物理化学(理论化学)、化学物理学];
学科分类号
070304 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Polymeric, soft, and biological materials exhibit viscoelasticity, which is a time dependent mechanical response to deformation. Material viscoelasticity emerges from the movement of a material's constituent molecules at the nano- and microscale in response to applied deformation. Therefore, viscoelastic properties depend on the speed at which a material is deformed. Recent technological advances, especially in atomic force microscopy (AFM), have provided tools to measure and map material viscoelasticity with nanoscale resolution. However, to obtain additional information about the viscoelastic behavior of a material from such measurements, theoretical grounding during data analysis is required. For example, commercially available bimodal AFM imaging maps two different viscoelastic properties of a sample, the storage modulus, E ', and loss tangent, tan delta, with each property being measured by a different resonance frequency of the AFM cantilever. While such techniques provide high resolution maps of E ' and tan delta, the different measurement frequencies make it difficult to calculate key viscoelastic properties of the sample such as: the model of viscoelasticity that describes the sample, the loss modulus, E '', at either frequency, elasticity E, viscosity eta, and characteristic response times tau. To overcome this difficulty, we present a new data analysis procedure derived from linear viscoelasticity theory. This procedure is applied and validated by performing amplitude modulation-frequency modulation (AM-FM) AFM, a commercially available bimodal imaging technique, on a styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR) with known mechanical behavior. The new analysis procedure correctly identified the type of viscoelasticity exhibited by the SBR and accurately calculated SBR E, eta, and tau, providing a useful means of enhancing the amount of information gained about a sample's nanoscale viscoelastic properties from bimodal AFM measurements. Additionally, being derived from fundamental models of linear viscoelasticity, the procedure can be employed for any technique where different viscoelastic properties are measured at different and discrete frequencies with applied deformations in the linear viscoelastic regime of a sample. This article describes and validates an analysis procedure that enhances nanoscale viscoelasticity characterization in bimodal AFM by determining how to model sample viscoelasticity then calculating additional sample properties.
引用
收藏
页码:7457 / 7470
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Discrimination of adhesion and viscoelasticity from nanoscale maps of polymer surfaces using bimodal atomic force microscopy
    Rajabifar, Bahram
    Bajaj, Anil
    Reifenberger, Ronald
    Proksch, Roger
    Raman, Arvind
    NANOSCALE, 2021, 13 (41) : 17428 - 17441
  • [2] Elastic and viscoelastic characterization of inhomogeneous polymers by bimodal atomic force microscopy
    Nguyen, Hung K.
    Ito, Makiko
    Nakajima, Ken
    JAPANESE JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS, 2016, 55 (08)
  • [3] Bimodal atomic force microscopy for the characterization of thiolated self-assembled monolayers
    Athanasopoulou, Evangelia-Nefeli
    Nianias, Nikolaos
    Ong, Quy Khac
    Stellacci, Francesco
    NANOSCALE, 2018, 10 (48) : 23027 - 23036
  • [4] Modeling and Measuring Viscoelasticity with Dynamic Atomic Force Microscopy
    Thoren, Per-Anders
    Borgani, Riccardo
    Forchheimer, Daniel
    Dobryden, Illia
    Claesson, Per M.
    Kassa, Hailu G.
    Leclere, Philippe
    Wang, Yifan
    Jaeger, Heinrich M. .
    Haviland, David B.
    PHYSICAL REVIEW APPLIED, 2018, 10 (02):
  • [5] Systematic Multidimensional Quantification of Nanoscale Systems From Bimodal Atomic Force Microscopy Data
    Lai, Chia-Yun
    Santos, Sergio
    Chiesa, Matteo
    ACS NANO, 2016, 10 (06) : 6265 - 6272
  • [6] Characterization of Surface Viscoelasticity and Energy Dissipation in a Polymer Film by Atomic Force Microscopy
    Wang, Dong
    Liang, Xiao-Bin
    Liu, Yan-Hui
    Fujinami, So
    Nishi, Toshio
    Nakajima, Ken
    MACROMOLECULES, 2011, 44 (21) : 8693 - 8697
  • [7] Application of atomic force microscopy in bitumen materials at the nanoscale: A review
    Xing, Chengwei
    Jiang, Wei
    Li, Mingchen
    Wang, Ming
    Xiao, Jingjing
    Xu, Zhoucong
    CONSTRUCTION AND BUILDING MATERIALS, 2022, 342
  • [8] Atomic force microscopy as a biophysical tool for nanoscale forensic investigations
    Yadavalli, Vamsi K.
    Ehrhardt, Christopher J.
    SCIENCE & JUSTICE, 2021, 61 (01) : 1 - 12
  • [9] Atomic force microscopy quantitative and qualitative nanoscale characterization of collagen thin films
    Stylianou, A.
    Yova, D.
    Politopoulos, K.
    EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES IN NON-DESTRUCTIVE TESTING V, 2012, : 415 - 420
  • [10] Mechanical characterization of cervical squamous carcinoma cells by atomic force microscopy at nanoscale
    Ding, Yong-xia
    Cheng, Yuan
    Sun, Quan-mei
    Zhang, You-yi
    You, Ke
    Guo, Yan-li
    Han, Dong
    Geng, Li
    MEDICAL ONCOLOGY, 2015, 32 (03) : 1 - 8