| Literature DB >> 31165019 |
Meguya Ryu1, Reo Honda1, Adrian Cernescu2, Arturas Vailionis3,4, Armandas Balčytis5, Jitraporn Vongsvivut6, Jing-Liang Li7, Denver P Linklater5, Elena P Ivanova8, Vygantas Mizeikis9, Mark J Tobin6, Junko Morikawa1, Saulius Juodkazis5,10,11.
Abstract
The nanoscale composition of silk defining its unique properties via a hierarchial structural anisotropy needs to be analysed at the highest spatial resolution of tens of nanometers corresponding to the size of fibrils made of β-sheets, which are the crystalline building blocks of silk. Nanoscale optical and structural properties of silk have been measured from 100 nm thick longitudinal slices of silk fibers with ca. 10 nm resolution, the highest so far. Optical sub-wavelength resolution in hyperspectral mapping of absorbance and molecular orientation were carried out for comparison at IR wavelengths of 2-10 μm using synchrotron radiation. A reliable distinction of transmission changes by only 1-2% as the anisotropy of amide bands was obtained from nanometer-thin slices of silk.Entities:
Keywords: absorbance; anisotropy; retardance; silk
Year: 2019 PMID: 31165019 PMCID: PMC6541335 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.10.93
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1X-ray tomographic images showing 3D rendered volumes of white Bombyx mori silk fibers at 3.15 μm pixel resolution. The bundle of silk fibers is composed of degummed single-strand silk fibers.
Figure 2(a) Wide-angle 2D X-ray diffraction of a bundle of white Bombyx mori silk fibers. The inset shows an optical microscopic image of a convolved silk fiber bundle. The silk bundle was composed of degummed single-strand silk fibers. The long axis of the fibers was predominantly vertical. (b) Optical image of white silk fibers through an optically aligned polariser–analyser (high-transmission) setup under white-light illumination using a Nikon MPlan 10× DIC objective lens with numerical aperture NA = 0.25.
Figure 3(a) A series of optical images taken at different voltages of a liquid crystal (LC) retarder (schematically shown in the inset of (b)) and a Nikon Optiphot-pol microscope with LMPlanFL 20× objective lens, NA = 0.4. (b) Calibration curve of retardance as a function of voltage collected at 635 nm wavelength and 22.8 °C.
Figure 4(a) Far-field optical image of longitudinal slices of white silk embedded in an epoxy sheet. The inset shows schematics of a lateral silk slice composed of β-sheets interconnected with α-coils and amorphous segments. (b) Optical and topographic images of the silk slice shown in (a) measured with scattering near-field microscopy (SNOM; neaspec). Markers in optical image indicate locations where spectra were acquired.
Figure 5Scattering near-field optical microscopy (SNOM) measurements of the nano-FTIR reflectance (a) and absorption (b) spectra from selected points on silk and epoxy (shown in the right inset).
Figure 6(a) Single-point absorbance spectra of thin silk samples on BaF2 collected at different angles θ between the linear polarisation and the fiber axis, using 2 μm pixel pitch, 15 × 15 pixel points, 4.17 μm spatial resolution, and 4 cm−1 spectral resolution. (b) Orientation color maps indicating that amide A (N–H) is oriented perpendicular to amide I (C=O) and amide II (C-N).