Bright Field Microscopy and Atomic Force Microscopy techniques are used to investigate
morphological properties of synthetic eumelanin, obtained by oxidation of L-DOPA solution,
deposited on glass and mica substrates. Deposits of eumelanin are characterized by aggregates
with different shape and size. On a micrometric scale, filamentous as well as granular
structures are present on glass and mica substrates, with a larger density on the former than on
the latter. On a nanometric scale, filamentous aggregates, several microns long and about 100
nm wide and high, and granular aggregates, ~50 nm high and 100 nm wide, are found on both
substrates, whereas point-like deposits less than 10 nm high and less than 50 nm wide are
found on mica substrate. Dynamic Light Scattering measurements and Atomic Force
Microscopy images support the evidence that eumelanin presents only nanometric point-like aggregates in aqueous solution, whereas such nanoaggregates organize themselves according
to granular and filamentous structures when deposition occurs, as a consequence of
interactions with the substrate surface
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