Literature DB >> 16112807

Water mapping in hydrated soft materials.

Alioscka Sousa1, Abdelaziz Aitouchen, Matthew Libera.   

Abstract

We present a method based on spatially resolved electron energy-loss spectroscopy in the cryo-STEM to map the spatial distribution of water in frozen-hydrated polymers. The spatial resolution is limited by the dose constraints imposed by radiation damage, and to stay within these constraints, the use of fine electron-probe sizes comes at the cost of reduced counts in the energy-loss spectra. Thus, at the resolution limit, the detection of isolated water-rich pixels or the identification of minor variations in water content across the specimen is complicated because one must distinguish significant fluctuations from noise. Here we develop a criterion with which to guide such a distinction. We characterize the intrinsic noise associated with spectral measurements under given illumination and acquisition conditions. We then use that noise in combination with scatter diagrams to threshold spectrum images and objectively identify statistically significant compositional fluctuations. We illustrate these ideas using a simulated spectrum dataset for a hypothetical blend of hydrophilic and hydrophobic homopolymers. We show that while a direct inspection of the water map may not allow any meaningful conclusions to be drawn, after applying the thresholding approach we can clearly identify the regions of the specimen that are rich in water. We also experimentally study a model blend system comprised of hydrophilic poly(vinyl pyrrolidone) (PVP) dispersed in a hydrophobic matrix of poly(styrene) (PS). By MLS fitting using damaged and undamaged PVP reference spectra, we determine that the critical dose characteristic of dry PVP is approximately 8000 e/nm2 using 200 keV incident electrons. Irradiating frozen-hydrated PVP gives rise to noticeable hydrogen evolution at doses of approximately 1500 e/nm2. To stay within this constraint we use doses of 400 e/nm2 and a pixel spacing in the spectrum imaging of 100 nm. In order to quantitatively map the water, PVP, and PS compositions, we measure their total inelastic scattering cross-sections. Direct inspection of the composition maps reveals the presence of large water-rich domains of the order of approximately 1 microm and the scatter-diagram thresholding approach identifies small water-rich domains one pixel in size.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16112807     DOI: 10.1016/j.ultramic.2005.06.059

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ultramicroscopy        ISSN: 0304-3991            Impact factor:   2.689


  7 in total

1.  Corneodesmosomal water content in frozen-hydrated porcine skin.

Authors:  Emre Firlar; Matthew Libera; Hilal Ilarslan; Manoj Misra
Journal:  J Invest Dermatol       Date:  2015-03-05       Impact factor: 8.551

2.  EELS characterization of radiolytic products in frozen samples.

Authors:  M A Aronova; A A Sousa; R D Leapman
Journal:  Micron       Date:  2010-11-03       Impact factor: 2.251

3.  Application of EELS and EFTEM to the life sciences enabled by the contributions of Ondrej Krivanek.

Authors:  Richard D Leapman
Journal:  Ultramicroscopy       Date:  2017-03-01       Impact factor: 2.689

4.  A systematic procedure to build a relaxed dense-phase atomistic representation of a complex amorphous polymer using a coarse-grained modeling approach.

Authors:  Xianfeng Li; Robert A Latour
Journal:  Polymer (Guildf)       Date:  2009-07-31       Impact factor: 4.430

Review 5.  Development and application of STEM for the biological sciences.

Authors:  Alioscka A Sousa; Richard D Leapman
Journal:  Ultramicroscopy       Date:  2012-05-18       Impact factor: 2.689

6.  Development of Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy in the Biological Sciences.

Authors:  M A Aronova; R D Leapman
Journal:  MRS Bull       Date:  2012-01       Impact factor: 6.578

7.  Reliable Characterization of Organic & Pharmaceutical Compounds with High Resolution Monochromated EEL Spectroscopy.

Authors:  Partha Pratim Das; Giulio Guzzinati; Catalina Coll; Alejandro Gomez Perez; Stavros Nicolopoulos; Sonia Estrade; Francesca Peiro; Johan Verbeeck; Aikaterini A Zompra; Athanassios S Galanis
Journal:  Polymers (Basel)       Date:  2020-06-27       Impact factor: 4.329

  7 in total

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