5 research outputs found

    Applications and limitations of electron correlation microscopy to study relaxation dynamics in supercooled liquids

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    Electron correlation microscopy (ECM) is a way to measure structural relaxation times, Ï„, of liquids with nanometer-scale spatial resolution using coherent electron scattering equivalent of photon correlation spectroscopy. We have applied ECM with a 3.5 nm diameter probe to Pt57.5Cu14.7Ni5.3P22.5 amorphous nanorods and Pd40Ni40P20 bulk metallic glass (BMG) heated inside the STEM into the supercooled liquid region. These data demonstrate that the ECM technique is limited by the characteristics of the time series, which must be at least 40Ï„ to obtain a well-converged correlation function g2(t), and the time per frame, which must be less than 0.1Ï„ to obtain sufficient sampling. A high-speed direct electron camera enables fast acquisition and affords reliable g2(t) data even with low signal per frame

    Applications and limitations of electron correlation microscopy to study relaxation dynamics in supercooled liquids

    Get PDF
    Electron correlation microscopy (ECM) is a way to measure structural relaxation times, Ï„, of liquids with nanometer-scale spatial resolution using coherent electron scattering equivalent of photon correlation spectroscopy. We have applied ECM with a 3.5 nm diameter probe to Pt57.5Cu14.7Ni5.3P22.5 amorphous nanorods and Pd40Ni40P20 bulk metallic glass (BMG) heated inside the STEM into the supercooled liquid region. These data demonstrate that the ECM technique is limited by the characteristics of the time series, which must be at least 40Ï„ to obtain a well-converged correlation function g2(t), and the time per frame, which must be less than 0.1Ï„ to obtain sufficient sampling. A high-speed direct electron camera enables fast acquisition and affords reliable g2(t) data even with low signal per frame.</p

    Static-state particle fabrication via rapid vitrification of a thixotropic medium

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    Upscale fabrication of functionalized microparticles is a pending challenge. Here, Kim et al. exploit the rheology of a thixotropic medium to grind sizeable amounts of raw material into well-defined colloidal dispersions, physically stabilized for further production steps
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