Visualizing Nanoscopic Topography and Patterns in Freely Standing Thin Films.
POSTER
Abstract
Thin liquid films containing micelles, nanoparticles, polyelectrolyte-surfactant complexes and smectic liquid crystals undergo thinning in a discontinuous, step-wise fashion. The discontinuous jumps in thickness are often characterized by quantifying changes in the intensity of reflected monochromatic light, modulated by thin film interference from a region of interest. Stratifying thin films exhibit a mosaic pattern in reflected white light microscopy, attributed to the coexistence of domains with various thicknesses, separated by steps. Using Interferometry Digital Imaging Optical Microscopy (IDIOM) protocols developed in the course of this study, we spatially resolve for the first time, the landscape of stratifying freestanding thin films. In particular, for thin films containing micelles of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), discontinuous, thickness transitions with concentration-dependent steps of 5-25 nm are visualized and analyzed using IDIOM~protocols. We distinguish~nanoscopic rims, mesas and craters and show that the~non-flat features are sculpted by oscillatory, periodic, supramolecular structural forces that arise in confined fluids
Authors
-
Subinuer Yilixiati
Univ of Illinois - Chicago, Chemical Engineering, Univ of Illinois - Chicago, Chemical Engineering, Univ of Illinois-Chicago
-
Yiran Zhang
Chemical Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago, Univ of Illinois - Chicago, Chemical Engineering, Univ of Illinois - Chicago, Chemical Engineering, Univ of Illinois-Chicago
-
Collin Pearsall
Chemical Engineering, Univ of Illinois - Chicago
-
Vivek Sharma
Chemical Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago, Univ of Illinois - Chicago, Chemical Engineering, Univ of Illinois - Chicago, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chemical Engineering, Univ of Illinois-Chicago