| Literature DB >> 25109363 |
Jerome Carnis1, Wonsuk Cha1, James Wingert2, Jinback Kang1, Zhang Jiang3, Sanghoon Song4, Marcin Sikorski4, Aymeric Robert4, Christian Gutt5, San-Wen Chen2, Yeling Dai2, Yicong Ma2, Hongyu Guo2, Laurence B Lurio6, Oleg Shpyrko2, Suresh Narayanan3, Mengmeng Cui7, Irem Kosif7, Todd Emrick7, Thomas P Russell7, Hae Cheol Lee8, Chung-Jong Yu8, Gerhard Grübel9, Sunil K Sinha2, Hyunjung Kim1.
Abstract
The recent advent of hard x-ray free electron lasers (XFELs) opens new areas of science due to their exceptional brightness, coherence, and time structure. In principle, such sources enable studies of dynamics of condensed matter systems over times ranging from femtoseconds to seconds. However, the studies of "slow" dynamics in polymeric materials still remain in question due to the characteristics of the XFEL beam and concerns about sample damage. Here we demonstrate the feasibility of measuring the relaxation dynamics of gold nanoparticles suspended in polymer melts using X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy (XPCS), while also monitoring eventual X-ray induced damage. In spite of inherently large pulse-to-pulse intensity and position variations of the XFEL beam, measurements can be realized at slow time scales. The X-ray induced damage and heating are less than initially expected for soft matter materials.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25109363 PMCID: PMC4127496 DOI: 10.1038/srep06017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1LCLS XCS experimental setup and measured speckle pattern.
(a). XCS instrument experimental setup at LCLS. Successive speckle patterns are recorded with a delay Δt between each frame. (b). TEM image of the gold nanoparticles (5.5 nm dia. nanospheres) grafted polystyrene sample (Mw = 42 kg/mol polystyrene matrix). (c). Speckle pattern produced by the fully transverse coherent X-ray beam incident on the sample in (b) in transmission geometry. This pattern was measured at SDD of 5037 mm and at 393 K. The color bar on the right indicates the intensity in the 2D detector converted into photons. The dark blue feature on the left lower part of the image is the beam stop used to mask the direct beam.
Figure 2g2 functions and relaxation times measured at different wave vector transfers.
(a). g2 functions at different wave vector transfer measured from the same sample. A total of 150 frames with 100 pulses per frame were recorded at each sample position. The red lines are compressed exponential fits to the experimental data. The obtained relaxation time constants are indicated for each plot. (b). Compressed exponent α obtained from the best fit to the g2 functions. (c). Corresponding q-dependence of the relaxation time constants (τ). The red line is τ = q−1 for comparison.
Figure 3Evolution of the dynamics at two different ages for a given wave vector transfer.
(a). Intensity-intensity autocorrelation function at q = 0.0247Å−1 at 103 minutes and (b). 477 minutes after the sample reached the temperature of 393 K. g2 functions are calculated from the first 75 frames (in red) and from the last 75 frames (in blue) among a total 150 frames. (c). Two-time correlations are calculated at the same q for the dataset in (a). (d). those for the data set in (b). The broadening is flagrant in c, whereas the relaxation time is more uniform along the sample age in (d).
Figure 4Evolution of the relaxation time as a function the wave vector transfer.
(a). τ(q) obtained from the images with 1, 2, 10, 30, and 100 pulses per frame measured successively for a total 150 frames. (b). τ at q = 0.0123 Å−1 as a function of the the age at 393 K for the same data set in (a). (c). Plot of τ(q) with 100 pulses per frame but at different ages. Position on the sample was changed after each measurement. In (a), the τ(q)s get slower even with increasing number of pulses per frame, as emphasized in (b) for a particular q. In c, the waiting time between the measurements was longer than in (a) to see more clearly the effect of aging. The data for 232 min. was collected at higher q and the error bars are larger than other sets due to lower scattering intensity at high q.