| Literature DB >> 33564603 |
Dorothee Silbernagl1, Media Ghasem Zadeh Khorasani1, Natalia Cano Murillo1, Anna Maria Elert1, Heinz Sturm1,2.
Abstract
A key application of atomic force microscopy (AFM) is the measurement of physical properties at sub-micrometer resolution. Methods such as force-distance curves (FDCs) or dynamic variants (such as intermodulation AFM (ImAFM)) are able to measure mechanical properties (such as the local stiffness, k r) of nanoscopic heterogeneous materials. For a complete structure-property correlation, these mechanical measurements are considered to lack the ability to identify the chemical structure of the materials. In this study, the measured attractive force, F attr, acting between the AFM tip and the sample is shown to be an independent measurement for the local chemical composition and hence a complete structure-property correlation can be obtained. A proof of concept is provided by two model samples comprised of (1) epoxy/polycarbonate and (2) epoxy/boehmite. The preparation of the model samples allowed for the assignment of material phases based on AFM topography. Additional chemical characterization on the nanoscale is performed by an AFM/infrared-spectroscopy hybrid method. Mechanical properties (k r) and attractive forces (F attr) are calculated and a structure-property correlation is obtained by a manual principle component analysis (mPCA) from a k r/F attr diagram. A third sample comprised of (3) epoxy/polycarbonate/boehmite is measured by ImAFM. The measurement of a 2 × 2 µm cross section yields 128 × 128 force curves which are successfully evaluated by a k r/F attr diagram and the nanoscopic heterogeneity of the sample is determined.Entities:
Keywords: AFM force spectroscopy; composites; principle component analysis; structure–property correlation; van der Waals forces
Year: 2021 PMID: 33564603 PMCID: PMC7849247 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.12.5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649